Keivan Guadalupe Stassun (born July 1972) is an American physicist and astronomer in the field of exoplanets. He is a physics professor at Vanderbilt University and an adjunct professor at Fisk University, institutions at which he oversees and co-directs the Fisk-Vanderbilt Masters-to-Ph.D Bridge Program.[1][2] Stassun has been an activist promoting the integration of underrepresented groups in the fields of STEM, especially math and science through research, outreach and teaching.[3]
Family life and education
Stassun was born to a Mexican mother and an Iranian father who left when he was an infant. He lived in Venice, CA until age seven, when his mother and stepfather married and moved to the San Fernando Valley where he grew up.[citation needed]
He was identified as "high IQ" and was recommended for a gifted magnet program: Sherman Oaks Center for Enriched Studies, where he went for both middle and high school. During his high school years he participated in a number of activities in the fine arts, sports, speech and debate, and newspapers and yearbook, all while graduating second in his class.[citation needed]
After Berkeley, he moved on to the University of Wisconsin to do his graduate work under the guidance of Bob Mathieu.[4] At Wisconsin, his ideas about the importance of combining scholarly practices in research, teaching, and outreach began to crystallize. In addition to carrying out his thesis research, he also became active in math/science education for minorities in the local schools, and he developed an astronomy outreach program (Scopes for Schools) which provides teachers with resources and training for teaching astronomy.[5]
Currently, Stassun serves as chair in the exoplanet science team of the Vanderbilt Initiative in Data-intensive Astrophysics (VIDA), which he helped found. The VIDA is a big data-enabling pilot-program from major astronomical surveys.[6]
He currently lives in Nashville, Tennessee with his wife and 2 sons
Stassun, Keivan Guadalupe (2000–07). "The Connection Between Rotation, Circumstellar Disks, and Accretion Among Low-Mass Pre-Main-Sequence Stars"[4]
Stassun, Keivan G.; Mathieu, Robert (2002–08). "A Spectroscopic and Photometric Study of Newly Discovered Pre-Main- Sequence Eclipsing Binaries in Orion"[15]
^ abStassun, Keivan Guadalupe (July 2000). "The Connection Between Rotation, Circumstellar Disks, and Accretion Among Low-Mass Pre-Main-Sequence Stars". PHDT. Bibcode:2000PhDT.........9S.
^Advancement, Research Corporation for Science (9 March 2015). "Three TREE Awards Announced". Research Corporation for Science Advancement. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
^Stassun, Keivan G.; Mathieu, Robert (August 2002). "A Spectroscopic and Photometric Study of Newly Discovered Pre-Main- Sequence Eclipsing Binaries in Orion". Noao: 196. Bibcode:2002noao.prop..196S.