Education
Pál Selényi studied physics and mathematics at the Budapest University.
engineer inventor physicist university professor
Pál Selényi studied physics and mathematics at the Budapest University.
He is also known as Paul Selenyi. Chester Carlson read one of Selenyi"s papers in the 1930s and was very greatly impressed. Subsequently, he invested in a big effort to develop xerography.
That may be the reason why Selenyi was known as the "father of xerography" by some people.
After finishing his studies, Selényi started to work for the newly created Applied Physics Department of the University. From his early works, Selényi was engaged in studying the nature of light.
One well-known result of this period is Selényi"s wide-angle interference experiment whose foundations go back to the discovery of the photoeffect (photo-electric effect), by Albert Einstein, and Hertz"s experiments on the reflection of radio waves. The Young experiment is an example: light passing through a pair of neighboring holes (in close proximity) results in the appearance of interference patterns on a screen behind the holes, but only if the angle covered by the incoming beams does not exceed a couple of degrees of angular width.
Hungarian Academy of Sciences.