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Zoltán Bay, whose
name the Foundation bears Zoltán Bay, the great Hungarian physicist who lent his name to this Foundation, was born a hundred years ago, at the turn of the 20th century. The electron multiplier, radio astronomy and the definition of the length of the metre based on the velocity of light are all innovations connected to his name, just to mention his most important achievements. Bay was a scientist who put the best results of basic research into practical realisation, and is thus a worthy choice to lend his name to the Foundation. |
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Zoltán Bay was born in Gyulavári
on 24th July 1900. Having completed his secondary school studies in Debrecen,
he soon became interested in the technical sciences. His inspirations
were great Hungarian scientists such as János Bólyai and
Loránd von Eötvös. In 1918, he became a member of the
József Eötvös College and studied at the Royal Hungarian
Péter Pázmány University. In 1923, he was awarded
a secondary school teachers diploma, and in 1926 received his doctorate
in physics. From 1926 to 1930, he worked on a scholarship in Germany,
where he experienced the character-forming atmosphere of a scientific
workshop, and where he also achieved significant results in examining
discharges in nitrogen gas and demonstrating the presence of atomic nitrogen.
On returning home, he was appointed head of the Department of Theoretical
Physics at Szeged University. In 1936, he took over the management of
the research laboratory of the United Incandescent Lamps and Electrical
Co. He became a correspondent member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
in 1937 and an ordinary member in 1945. In 1938, he was appointed professor
at the Department of Nuclear Physics at the Technical University of Buda-pest.
In 1946, he carried out successful Moon-radar experiments. Leaving Hungary
in 1948, he continued his research as a professor at the George Washington
University, USA. His most important achievement here was to complete work
on development of the electron multiplier, which he had begun in Hungary
in 1938.
In 1955, Bay became head of the Department of Nuclear Physics at the National Bureau of Standards, where he measured the frequency and velocity of light by a previously unknown method. As a result of his research, the conference of the International Weights and Measures Bureau held in 1983 accepted as a standard the definition of a metre as recommended by Bay. He retired at the age of 72. In 1981, he was elected an honorary member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. He died on 4th October 1992 at his home in Washington. |
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The centenary of the birth of Zoltán
Bay was celebrated with a worthy series of events in his home country
of Hungary. On 23rd July 2000, a statue of Bay was unveiled on a public
square in the 4th district of Budapest in the presence of representatives
of the 4th District Mayors Office, GE Hungary Rt. (legal successor
to the former United Incandescent Lamps and Electrical Co.), leaders
of the Bay Zoltán Foundation for Applied Research and numerous
admirers. On 24th July 2000, in the entrance hall of the Hungarian Academy
of Sciences, an all-day meeting was held to commemorate the lifes
work and achievements of the great physicist. The centennial series
of events closed in Gyulavári on 25th July 2000, with the placing
of a wreath at Zoltán Bays grave and memorial, together
with commemorative lectures. |