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Abdul Qadeer Khan, NI, HI, FPAS (/ ˈ ɑː b d əl ˈ k ɑː d ɪər ˈ k ɑː n / ⓘ AHB-dəl KAH-deer KAHN; Urdu: عبد القدیر خان; 1 April 1936 – 10 October 2021), [3] known as A. Q. Khan, was a Pakistani nuclear physicist and metallurgical engineer who is colloquially known as the "father of Pakistan's atomic weapons program".
Abdul Qadeer Khan (metallurgist and founder of Pakistan's Nuclear Programme) [6] [7] [8] Ahmed Mohiuddin (zoologist) Abdul Hameed Nayyar (nuclear physicist) Atta-ur-Rahman (chemist) Faheem Hussain (theoretical physicist) Hafeez Hoorani (particle physicist) Muhammad Hafeez Qureshi (nuclear physicist) Pervez Hoodbhoy (nuclear physicist)
Abul Khair Kashfi – author, researcher, critic, linguist and scholar of Urdu literature and linguistics; Hiroji Kataoka – scholar of Urdu in Japan; exchange student in the early 1970s [4] Abdul Qadeer Khan – scientist and metallurgical engineer, widely regarded as the founder of the uranium program of the country's atomic bomb projects
The GIK Institute is a private educational institution, named after former bureaucrat and former President of Pakistan Ghulam Ishaq Khan.The project was delegated to Pakistani scientist, Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan, who was one of the founding members of the institute and was once registered as an associate professor of physics.
The Dr. A. Q. Khan Research Laboratories (shortened as KRL), [2] is a federally funded research and development laboratory located in Kahuta at a short distance from Rawalpindi in Punjab, Pakistan. Established in 1976, the laboratory is best known for its central role in Pakistan's nuclear weapons program and its understanding the nuclear science.
Tehreek-e-Tahaffuz-e-Pakistan (TTP) (Urdu: تحریک تحفظ پاکستان; Movement for the Protection of Pakistan) was a political party in Pakistan founded and led by nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan. [1] The party is registered at the Election Commission of Pakistan and is headquartered in Islamabad.
Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan's UF 6 gas centrifuges. Natural uranium consists of only 99.3% 238 U and only 0.7% 235 U, but only the latter is fissile. The rarer but chemically identical 235 U must be physically separated from the more plentiful isotope. This process of uranium enrichment into weapon-grade is extremely difficult and sensitive, and ...
A strongly worded article against Hoodbhoy's views was published by Abdul Qadeer Khan, who termed commission as "a strategic organisation." [70] [71] Another work on HEC's praise was authored by Mansoor Akbar Kundi, former Vice Chancellor of the Gomal University and later Executive Director of Higher Education Commission. In his article ...