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Bangladeshi astrophysicist Tonima Tasnim Ananna on SN Top 10 Scientists list

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02:05 PM, December 23, 2020 / LAST MODIFIED: 09:25 PM, December 25, 2020



Tonima Tasnim Ananna. Photo: Collected
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Tonima Tasnim Ananna. Photo: Collected

Youth Desk

Popular bi-weekly magazine Science News published their 2020 edition of SN Top 10 Scientists for this year. For the sixth consecutive year, Science News featured 10 early and mid-career scientists who are aiming to solve some of science's biggest challenges.
Bangladeshi astrophysicist Tonima Tasnim Ananna topped the list this year for her outstanding work and research on black holes. With the help of artificial intelligence, Ananna has successfully captured the most complete picture yet of black holes across the universe —where they are, how they grow and how they affect their environments.
For her PhD from Yale University in 2019, her goal was to create a model of how black holes grow and change across cosmic history. To make the research more extensive and detailed, she developed a neural network, a type of artificial intelligence, to find a description of the black hole population that explained what all the observatories saw.
Ananna believes understanding black holes is key to understanding how cosmic structures, everything from galaxy clusters down to planets and perhaps even life, came to be. Her model can describe black holes at different cosmic distances, how black holes grow and change over time and might help in figuring out what black holes eat.
Ananna worked as an intern at NASA and CERN, traveled to the European particle physics laboratory near Geneva, and spent a year at the University of Cambridge. She attended Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania for her undergraduate studies and is currently working as Postdoctoral Research Associate at Dartmouth College.

Inspired by her mother, who first told her about the Pathfinder spacecraft landing on Mars. When Ananna was just a 5 years old, she developed a passion for astronomy from an early age.
Ananna co-founded Wi-STEM (pronounced "wisdom"), a mentorship network for girls and young women who are interested in science. She and four other Bangladeshi scientists, who studied in the United States, currently mentor a group of 20 female high school and college students in Bangladesh, helping them find paths to pursue science.
 
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Yeah Bright young woman.

If only the women in my immediate circle were like that.

All the young ones care about is hair tossing, nail-biting and giggling fits.

And then of course social media, young hunks etc.

I'd be happy if even 10% of the middle class Bangladeshi women were as focused on research and fact-finding as this one is.

Sigh...
 
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Yeah Bright young woman.

If only the women in my immediate circle were like that.

All the young ones care about is hair tossing, nail-biting and giggling fits.

And then of course social media, young hunks etc.

I'd be happy if even 10% of the middle class Bangladeshi women were as focused on research and fact-finding as this one is.

Sigh...
Live in the US too, Bangladeshis are some of the smartest people I know. They are high performers on tests and stuff like that.
 
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Yeah Bright young woman.

If only the women in my immediate circle were like that.

All the young ones care about is hair tossing, nail-biting and giggling fits.

And then of course social media, young hunks etc.

I'd be happy if even 10% of the middle class Bangladeshi women were as focused on research and fact-finding as this one is.

Sigh...
Smart young lady.
Unfortunately there's nothing for her in Bangladesh that might interest her !
 
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Smart young lady.
Unfortunately there's nothing for her in Bangladesh that might interest her !
After successfully building an Aeronautical University in Bangladesh, Hasina may build a Hasina Astrophysics University and call this Lady back to teach about billions of galaxies, black holes, white dwarfs, dark energy, particle/anti-particle, how the Sun and stars produce heat without the presence of oxygen, why light with a speed of 299,792.458 km/sec cannot escape a black hole and thousand others.

Sarcasm on Hasina aside, actually, I would love people in BD to learn many things that science can teach. Unfortunately, reading ignorant books is our main source of knowledge.

This is an age whereby scientists have developed ways to take pictures of even the Black Holes trillions of kms away. It surprised me to see the photographs.
 
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Smart young lady.
Unfortunately there's nothing for her in Bangladesh that might interest her !

If she was born in US then little chance for her to come back but maybe handsome Bangladeshi man can be a good idea to start......Bangladesh gov can try to find good candidate from their civil servant or police/army, send him to USA and bring back that girl to Banglades...!!!!!! They will produce smart kids as well.

Indonesian police

1609292222692.png


Another one :D

1609292368508.png


Air Force
1609292499700.png


I know Bangladesh also can find some in their police/Army........ :coffee:
 
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Smart young lady.
Unfortunately there's nothing for her in Bangladesh that might interest her !

Yes. She has gone on to much bigger and better things, PhD from Yale, Internships at NASA/CERN, Post Graduate Residency at Dartmouth, all the right steps and credentials as an astrophysicist. She has her academic path well set outside Bangladesh and will get access to budgets, tools and resources to continue research into deep space phenomena like black holes, there are so many unanswered questions in that field and so much promise to excel and discover.

She will actually do way more good outside Bangladesh as an ambassador for us than be limited in Bangladesh by unqualified people over her who will never see her potential.

This is the classic case like that for Fazlur Rahman, the brilliant mechanical engineer who designed the square tube structure for Sears Tower in Chicago (while working for Skidmore, Owings and Merrill) back in the 60s and 70's). He had come back to Pakistan after graduation, but left again in two more years.

We in the subcontinent don't know how to value talent.
 
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If she was born in US then little chance for her to come back but maybe handsome Bangladeshi man can be a good idea to start......Bangladesh gov can try to find good candidate from their civil servant or police/army, send him to USA and bring back that girl to Banglades...!!!!!! They will produce smart kids as well.

Indonesian police

View attachment 701363

Another one :D

View attachment 701364

Air Force
View attachment 701365

I know Bangladesh also can find some in their police/Army........ :coffee:

Well good for you to act as matchmaker :-) (and they can find fine matches for her in Bangladesh like this) but I believe her parents may end up finding a match for her stateside, or she will. She won't be leaving the US I'm afraid, judging by past experience with brilliant academics like her.

Women Academics in Bangladesh or abroad typically don't become trophy wives.
 
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