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Academic research at Harvard University
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC).

Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH)

Cambridge health alliance

boston children's hospital

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

Foces Institute

Harvard pilgrimage medical care

Hebrew Institute for the Aged (Hebrew Senior Life)

Jocelyn Diabetes Center (jocelyn Diabetes Center)

Massachusetts Eye and Ear Hospital

Judge Baker Children's Center

Massachusetts general hospital.

McLean Hospital (McLean Hospital)

Huangshan hospital

Schepens Ophthalmology Institute

Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital.

Veterans Affairs Boston Medical System Collection Resources Harvard University has the largest academic library in the United States and the fifth largest in the world (after the Library of Congress, the British Library, the French National Library and the New York Public Library).

The central system of Harvard University Library is located in Widner Library in Harvard Courtyard. The whole system covers 80 different libraries, with an overall collection of more than 6,543,806,000 volumes. It is the largest academic library network in the United States and the third largest in the United States (after the Library of Congress and the Boston Public Library). Different libraries are suitable for different types of readers: cabot Science Library, lamont Library and Wilder Library, which are located in Cambridge headquarters, are the most frequently visited libraries by undergraduates; Horton Library and Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library specialize in collecting historical reference materials on the development of American women's status; The database of Harvard University contains all kinds of precious books and manuscripts. Some of the oldest maps and place names dictionaries in America can be found in Puxi Library of Harvard University. Harvard Yanjing Library keeps documents related to the ancient languages of East Asia. Museum 1, Carpenter Visual Arts Center: designed by the famous architect le corbusier, it is the database of the film art department of the university.

2. Harvard Art Museum

1. Arthur m sackler Museum, which contains Asian artworks.

Secondly, the Busch-reisinger Busch-reisinger Museum has a collection of works of art from Central and Northern Europe.

Third, Fogg Art Museum, which contains works of art from the Middle Ages in the West.

3. Harvard Art Museum online collection.

4. Strauss Conservation Center.

5. Harvard Museum of Natural History.

6. Harvard University Herbarium.

7. Mineral logic &; Geological museum)

8. Museum of Comparative Zoology.

9. Arnold Botanical Garden

10, collection of historical scientific instruments.

1 1, located at the Fisher Museum in Harvard Forest.

12, Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.

13, Semite Museum

14, Warren Anatomy Museum

15, animal specimen database

16, Digital Harvard

17, Peabody Online Museum

18, Harvard Museum of Science and Culture.

19, metaLAB (at) Harvard's research funding ranks first among the global scientific research institutions, and 20 13 has reached $32 billion, which is the largest endowment fund after the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; Harvard spends more than $750 million annually on scientific research, supporting hundreds of research institutions in 14 colleges. Impact factors: the annual report published by Nature on March 27th, 20th14th, and the contribution index of high-quality papers published by Nature on March 27th, 20th13rd, ranking first in Harvard University and sixth in the world by Chinese Academy of Sciences. Harvard University also ranked first in the citation ranking of papers published in sciencewatch during the decade of 1999-2009. Ranked institutions 3 Articles 4 1. Harvard university 158.993872, Massachusetts institute of technology 84.682283, Stanford university 80.2 1 1704. National institutes of health 73.46 18 15. Max Planck Institute, Germany 70.652 166. China Academy of Sciences, China 63. 15 1657. National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), France, 59, 2008. University of Tokyo, Japan 57. 19 1289. University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). University of Cambridge, UK 48.52 15 1 the most cited institution, 1999-2009 ranked the number of institutional papers 1 Harvard University 95,2912,597,78627.262 The largest Planck Institute.

During 1954, john franklin enders, a scientist from Boston Children's Hospital, and his team won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their successful artificial cultivation of poliovirus.

1960, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center completed the first pacemaker implantation.

196 1 year, Georg Von Békésy won the nobel prize in physiology or medicine for discovering the physical mechanism of sound analysis and transmission in the inner ear cochlea.

From 65438 to 0962, james watson, a molecular biologist, won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his theory of DNA double helix model.

From 65438 to 0964, Conrad Bloch won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of cholesterol and fatty acid biosynthesis.

1965, Julian Schwinger, a professor of physics, shared the Nobel Prize in physics with richard feynman and Ichiro Asanaga for their fundamental contributions to quantum electrodynamics and particle physics.

From 65438 to 0965, Woodward, the father of modern organic synthesis, won the Nobel Prize in chemistry.

From 65438 to 0967, ophthalmologist george wald won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his pioneering research in the field of retina.

197 1 year, simon smith kuznets, the father of GNP, won the Nobel Prize in Economics that year.

From 65438 to 0972, Kenneth Joseph Arrow shared the Nobel Prize in Economics with John Hicks for his outstanding contribution to the general equilibrium theory.

From 65438 to 0973, Hua Xili Leontief won the Nobel Prize in Economics for her research on input-output analysis methods.

1976, William Lipscomb, an inorganic chemist, won the Nobel Prize in chemistry for his research on the structure of borane.

1977, John van Vleck and Neville Mott won the 1977 nobel prize in physics for their "basic theoretical research on the electronic structure of magnetic and disordered systems".

1979, steven weinberg won the Nobel Prize in physics for the experimental verification of parity breaking caused by Z boson mixing and electromagnetic interaction. Together with him, glashow, a professor at Harvard University, was the pioneer of The Theory of Unity.

1980, baruj benacerraf won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for discovering the surface structure of genetic cells that control immune response.

In the same year, Walter Gilbert and frederick sanger won the Nobel Prize in chemistry for developing a method to determine DNA sequence.

198 1 year, David Huber won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his research on the visual system (the ability to interpret retinal coded pulse information with visual cortex cells).

1984, carlo Rubia won the Nobel Prize in Physics in the same year because he played a decisive role in the large-scale experimental scheme of discovering weak propagators W and Z..

1986, Dudley R. Herschbach, a professor of chemistry, shared the 1986 Nobel Prize in chemistry with Li Yuanzhe and John Polanyi for studying the in-situ kinetic energy surface of chemical elementary reaction system.

From 65438 to 0989, Norman Ramsey won the Nobel Prize in Physics for developing ultra-precision cesium atomic clock and hydrogen maser.

From 65438 to 0990, joseph murray won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his contribution to "research on human organ and cell transplantation".

In the same year, elias james corey won the Nobel Prize in chemistry for developing the theory and method of computer-aided organic synthesis.

In 2002, riccardo giacconi won the 2002 Nobel Prize in Physics for his pioneering contribution to X-ray astronomy.

In 2004, linda buck won the 2004 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with richard axel for his outstanding research on the sense of smell.

In 2005, Roy glauber won the Nobel Prize in Physics for his contribution to the optical coherent quantum theory.

In 2009, Jack Szostak shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with two scientists for discovering the mechanism of telomere and telomerase protecting chromosomes.

In 20 13, Martin Capuleus won the Nobel Prize in chemistry for "creating a multi-scale model of complex chemical system".