A St Andrews University professor has been awarded one of the top accolades in his field.
Professor Eric Priest has been given the Senior Prize of the European Solar Physics Division of the European Physical Society.
The prize, the most prestigious in Europe, is given every three years.
Prof Priest has been honoured for “long-standing leadership via mentoring, supervising and field-defining textbooks and for fundamental contributions in key topics of solar magnetohydrodynamics, particularly magnetic reconnection in the solar atmosphere and solar coronal heating”.
“It is a real surprise to me and is humbling that my life’s work is being acknowledged by my European colleagues in this way,” he said.
Professor Priest was due to receive the award at the triennial general assembly of European solar physicists in Italy in September, but, due to the coronavirus outbreak, the assembly has been postponed to September 2021.
Professor Priest came to St Andrews as a young applied mathematics lecturer in 1968 and retired 10 years ago, but is still active in research, regularly giving lectures and producing new ideas for publication.
He applies his mathematics to the Sun, building models of the complex ways in which its magnetic field interacts with its atmosphere to produce dynamic processes such as solar flares and huge ejections that influence the space weather around the Earth.