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Where is Kyushu University?
Kyushu University is located at No.744 Yuangang, West District, Fukuoka City, Fukuoka Prefecture.

Kyushu University (English: Kyushu University; Japanese pen name: きゅぅしゅぅだぃがく), referred to as the Nine Universities (Japanese pen name :きゅぅだ).

Founded in 1903, it is a world-class comprehensive research-oriented national university headquartered in Fukuoka, Japan.

Imperial University of Japan, Super International University Program (Class A), Federation of Engineering Departments of Eight Universities, Academic Research Forum, Designated National University, World Top Scientific Research Center Program, Japan Ocean Innovation Alliance, Nuclear Energy Talent Training Alliance, University Cosmological Engineering Alliance, JANET of Japan Europe, RENKEI of Japan and Mirai of Switzerland.

Kyushu University has 12 department, 18 research department and five research institutes, with about 186 19 students and about 2,074 faculty members, including 27 foreign faculty members and 2,387 international students.

In 2023, QS World University World Ranking135; Times Higher Education World University 02 1 Japan ranked 4th.

Academic research:

In several authoritative surveys in Japan, Kyushu University has a good evaluation, especially in the department of science and engineering. Kyushu University has been committed to higher academic goals, not only improving the level of academic research, but also cooperating with the outside world to actively carry out academic exchanges and research cooperation.

Kyushu University has signed academic exchange agreements with hundreds of schools and institutions in 38 countries and regions.

At the same time, it also actively promoted personnel exchanges and set up a number of student exchange programs. In order to facilitate the study of foreign students, Kyushu University has also set up an English teaching system.

2065438+016543810. In October, the team led by Hirosuke Morita, a professor at the School of Science of Kyushu University, successfully synthesized the chemical element 1 13 at the PeopleSoft Accelerator Research Center of Japan Institute of Physical Chemistry. (Nh) and named it Nihonheim (ニホニム).