Starting from next year and for the whole 27 after, he was working in different institutions researching nuclear physics, majority of which had to do with tandem accelerators.
Later, he worked at Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, and accepted an invitation to Jerusalem, Israel for one year, where he taught at Racah Institute of Physics, a division of the Hebrew University.
The construction was based on 3-MV model of pelletron tandem accelerator, which was one of his key interests.
The same year he was awarded with a Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria.
[1] In 2010 he was awarded by Austrian Academy of Sciences with an Erwin Schrödinger Prize,[2] and a year later he became a Fellow of the American Association award for the Advancement of Science.