The Faculty of Science was established on 16 May 1949. In order to develop and improve the teaching of natural sciences, a separate faculty, the Faculty of Science was created from 22 departments and one institute. Before 1949, the
Faculty of Humanities, Sciences, Law and Political Science and Medicine constituted one big faculty. The new faculty consisted of 5 institutes: the Institute of Biology, the Institute of Physics, the Institute of Geography, the Institute of Chemistry, and the Institute of Mathematics. In 2005, József Gál along with Victor Benno Meyer-Rochow of the
Jacobs University Bremen was awarded with the
ig Nobel Prize. In 2010, a former student, Judit Nagy, died in a traffic accident at the age of 47. Nagy was a leading scientist in biochemistry at
Imperial College London. In 2012,
Endre Szemerédi was awarded with an
Abel Prize. In 2021,
László Lovász, along with
Avi Wigderson of the Institute for Advanced Study in
Princeton, was awarded with an
Abel Prize. During the
COVID-19 pandemic, the dean, Imre Kacskovics, was often interviewed and worked as a consultant for the Hungarian prime minister,
Viktor Orbán. On 17 December 2021, the Faculty's former student,
Árpád Pusztai, died. He made a career at
The Rowett Institute in
Aberdeen Scotland. He was known for his research in
biochemistry and the
Pusztai affair. The
European Commission appointed three new members to the governing body of the leading European scientific organisation, including
László Lovász, professor of mathematics at Faculty and former President of the
Hungarian Academy of Sciences on 1 March 2022. During the
Russo-Ukrainian War, free courses were offered for
Ukrainian students. In April 2022, new quantum processors were purchased by Eötvös Loránd University. According to the AD scientific index, among the top 10 most influential scientists at the Eötvös Loránd University are from the Faculty of Science. On 1 July 2022,
Katalin Karikó, Hungarian-American biochemist who specializes in RNA-mediated mechanisms, was awarded with an honorary doctorate by the university. In 2023, a former
Bachelor of Science graduate,
Ferenc Krausz, was awarded
Nobel Prize in Physics. == Institutes ==