Hungarian pioneer Ferenc Mezei joins the European Spallation Source project
DOI: 10.1063/PT.4.1374
Ferenc Mezei is the originator of the ESS design concept, the long pulse spallation source. With long neutron pulses, more neutrons can be generated, thus providing significantly better quality scientific results and more scientific applications. Long pulses are also better suited for life sciences and soft matter than short pulses, making the ESS particularly useful for biology, pharmaceutical and medicine.Professor Mezei was formerly the Scientific Director of ESS Hungary, the Hungarian bid to host the ESS. At the ESS Secretariat, Professor Mezei will lead the target station division.
Mezei is a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and of Academia Europaea. He is also the inventor of the neutron spin-echo spectroscopy method, which has had far-reaching implications for the understanding of polymers, proteins, glasses and magnetic materials.
Mezei Is today a visiting scholar at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in USA, and he has also been the Director of the Berlin Neutron Scattering Center, today part of the Helmholtz Zentrum für Materialen und Energie. He has received several prestigious scientific awards, among others the Hewlett-Packard Europhysics Prize and the first ever Walter Hälg Prize of the European Neutron Scattering Association.
The European Spallation Source will be the world’s most powerful research facility for materials and life science using neutrons. It will be built in Lund in southern Sweden. Fourteen European countries are currently partners in the project, which has now entered a Design Update phase prior to construction in 2013.