This year’s retirement ceremony took place on August 20, 2014 at Fusion Hall, KI Building, on campus. The ten faculty members whose average service to KAIST exceeded 25 years were honored at the ceremony. They have been appointed emeritus professors this month.
President Steve Kang noted their contributions to the development of KAIST, offering appreciation and recognition of each retiree. The retiring faculty members were:
Ja-Kyung Koo, Professor of Mathematical Sciences
Jang-Hyuk Kwon, Professor of Aerospace Engineering
Sung-Hee Kim, Professor of College of Business
Jin-Hyung Kim, Professor of Computer Science
Hie-Tae Moon, Professor of Physics
Ji-Won Yang, Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Chin-Wan Chung, Professor of Computer Science
Nam-Zin Cho, Professor of Nuclear and Quantum Engineering
Chul-Oh Cho, Professor of Biological Sciences
Byoung-Kyu Choi, Professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering
- Professor Mooseok Jang's research team at the Department of Bio and Brain Engineering develops an ultra-compact, high-resolution spectrometer using 'double-layer disordered metasurfaces' that generate unique random patterns depending on light's color. - Unlike conventional dispersion-based spectrometers that were difficult to apply to portable devices, this new concept spectrometer technology achieves 1nm-level high resolution in a device smaller than 1cm, smaller than a fingernail. - It c
2025-06-13- KAIST-KRIBB Develops ‘FiNi-seq’ Technology to Capture Characteristics of Fibrotic Microenvironments Accumulated in Liver Tissue and Dynamic Changes of Early Aging Cells - Elucidation of the Spatial Ecosystem of Aged Liver Tissue, where Reprogramming of Senescent Cells and Immune Exhaustion Progresses, at the Single-Cell Genome and Epigenome Levels < (From left) Professor Jong-Eun Park of KAIST Graduate School of Medical Science and Engineering (GSMSE), Dr. Chuna Kim of K
2025-06-12What started as an idea under KAIST’s Global Singularity Research Project—"Can we build a quantum computer using magnets?"—has now become a scientific reality. A KAIST-led international research team has successfully demonstrated a core quantum computing technology using magnetic materials (ferromagnets) for the first time in the world. KAIST (represented by President Kwang-Hyung Lee) announced on the 6th of May that a team led by Professor Kab-Jin Kim from the Department of P
2025-06-12< Photo 1. (Front row, from left) Jeesoo Park (Ph.D. Candidate), Professor Hee-Tak Kim (Back row, from left) Kyunghwa Seok (Ph.D. Candidate), Dr. Gisu Doo, Euntaek Oh (Ph.D. Candidate) > Hydrogen is gaining attention as a clean energy source that emits no carbon. Among various methods, water electrolysis, which splits water into hydrogen and oxygen using electricity, is recognized as an eco-friendly hydrogen production method. Specifically, proton exchange membrane water electrolysis
2025-06-11· A team led by Professor Won Do Heo from the Department of Biological Sciences, KAIST, has developed a pioneering technology that selectively acetylates specific RNA molecules in living cells and tissues. · The platform uses RNA-targeting CRISPR tools in combination with RNA-modifying enzymes to chemically modify only the intended RNA. · The method opens new possibilities for gene therapy by enabling precise control of disease-related RNA without affecting the rest of the
2025-06-10