About Mate Csanad
Máté Csanád started his university studies at the University of Innsbruck (Austria), and obtained a Physics MSc degree at the Eötvös University (Hungary) in 2004. He pursued his graduate studies at the Stony Brook University (NY, USA) and at the Eötvös University, where he gained a PhD in 2007. After several semesters spent at CERN and at the Brookhaven National Laboratory, he now works at Eötvös University, where he also habilitated in 2013. He obtained his DSc degree from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 2021, and has been a professor since then. His interests focus on high energy heavy ion physics, hydrodynamic modelling of the quark gluon plasma, quantum statistical correlations and the femtometer spacetime structure of quark matter. He leads the Hungarian participation in experiments at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, and is also a member in CERN experiments. His main research interests include the understanding of spatiotemporal structures on the femtometer scale via femtoscopy, as well as analytical solutions of relativistic hydrodynamics to understand the time evolution of matter created in collider experiments.