Kétévi Adiklè Assamagan | |
Birth Place: | Gabon |
Workplaces: | Brookhaven National Laboratory Hampton University Paul Scherrer Institute |
Alma Mater: | Southern Illinois University University of Lomé |
Thesis Title: | A precise determination of the pion beta decay rate : design and calibration |
Thesis Url: | http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/34689735 |
Kétévi Adiklè Assamagan is an African American physicist at the Brookhaven National Laboratory. He was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 2021. Assamagan founded the African School of Physics.
Assamagan was born in Port-Gentil Gabon, and moved to Togo at the age of 4.[1] [2] He was an undergraduate student at the University of Lomé. After earning his bachelor's degree in Physics and Chemistry he was awarded a scholarship from the African-American Institute to study in the United States, where he joined the Southern Illinois University.[3] He eventually started a graduate studies at Ball State University. His Master's research involved the development of a two-dimensional analytical model of a solar concentrator.[4] After earning his master's degree, he moved to the University of Virginia, where he worked toward a doctorate in particle physics.[5] During his doctorate he worked at the Paul Scherrer Institute.
Assamagan was appointed to Hampton University where he worked on the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility. He eventually moved to the ATLAS experiment in CERN. His research considers physics beyond the Standard Model. He moved to Brookhaven National Laboratory in 2001, where he worked on the physics analysis tools for ATLAS. He was made coordinator for the software of the Muon Spectrometer. He was part of the ATLAS Collaboration when they first observed the Higgs boson in 2012.
Assamagan is co-founder of the African School of Physics,[6] [7] a non-profit school training African researchers in fundamental physics and applications. In 2019, he co-funded with Fairouz Malek, Simon Connel and others, the African Strategy for Fundamental Physics.[8] He was elected to the African Academy of Sciences in 2019 and the American Physical Society in 2021.[9]
Assamagan plays African drums.[10]
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