György Szigeti
György Szigeti (1905-1978),[1] also known as Gyorgy Szigeti, was a Hungarian physicist and engineer who developed tungsten lamps.
In 1923 at Tungsram Ltd., a research laboratory was established for improving light sources, mainly electric bulbs.[1] The head of that laboratory was Ignácz Pfeiffer (1867-1941), whose research staff included Szigeti, along with Zoltan Bay (1900-1992), Tivadar Millner, Imre Bródy (1891-1944), Ernő Winter (1897-1971), and others.[1]
Szigeti worked together with Zoltan Bay on metal-vapor lamps and fluorescent light sources. They received a U.S. patent on "electroluminescent light sources" that were made of silicon carbide; these light sources were the ancestors of light-emitting diodes (LEDs).[1]
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Fizikai Szemle 1999/5 - Zsolt Bor: Optics by Hungarians" (with Zoltan Bay), József Attila University, Szeged, Hungary, 1999, webpage: KFKI-Hungary-Bor.
External links
- KFKI notes on György Szigeti.
- HPO-Hungary on György Szigeti.
- BzLogi-Hungary-Bzaka on György Szigeti.
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