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IST Austria

Institute of Science and Technology Austria
IST Austria
IST-logo.png
Type Public
Established 2009
President Thomas Henzinger
Dean Nick Barton (Dean of the graduate school)
Academic staff
306
Students 121
121
Location Klosterneuburg, Lower Austria, Austria
Colours Green
Website http://www.ist.ac.at/

The Institute of Science and Technology Austria, commonly known as IST Austria, is a young international institute of basic research and graduate education in natural and mathematical sciences, located in Maria Gugging, Klosterneuburg, 20 km northwest of the Austrian capital of Vienna. It was established and inaugurated by the provincial government of Lower Austria and the federal government of Austria in 2009 and is expected to grow to about ninety research groups by 2026.

IST Austria is modeled after and combines the methods of ETH Zurich, Weizmann Institute, and the Max Planck Society. First-class, curiosity-driven research is the core value of the concept. Scientists are encouraged to pursue their own goals and ideas not restricted by government or economic interest.

The institute currently consists of 42 research groups. Its graduate school offers PhD degrees in Biology, Physics, Mathematics, Computer Science, Neuroscience and Data Science and Computation as part of its ISTScholar program funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program and a Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant. As of 2015, 121 students were enrolled in the PhD program.

Scientists from 50 countries, a majority of whom are postdoctoral researchers, work at IST Austria and the institute operates in English.

The idea of creating a scientific flagship organization for research and postgraduate studies at the highest level was proposed by Austrian physicist Anton Zeilinger in 2002 at the annual technology forum in Alpbach. After several studies about the feasibility of creating such an institute, a working group was formed in the Austrian federal ministry of education and science and the four provinces of Lower Austria, Upper Austria, Styria and Vienna put in bids to host the new institute. In 2005, the council of ministers decided to build the institute in Klosterneuburg, Lower Austria.


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