Cape Argus

‘I work hard – not for me, but for the African child’

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A PROFESSOR from the University of the Free State has been recognised as one of the top 1% of scientists on the global Clarivate Web of Science list.

According to Clarivate, this accolade recognises true pioneers in their field over the past decade, demonstrat­ed by the production of multiple high-cited papers that rank in the top 1% by citations for field and year in the Web of Science.

It said the highly cited researcher­s truly are one in a 1 000 and the list is updated annually.

Professor Abdon Atangana, 35, originally from Cameroon, has called Bloemfonte­in home for the past 11 years. He’s a mathematic­ian and researcher at the university’s Institute for Groundwate­r Studies and is one of 10 South African scientists recognised.

He is known for developing a new fractional operator used to model realworld problems arising in the fields of engineerin­g, science and technology.

The Alexandria Engineerin­g Journal had an article which stated that the use of the Atangana-Baleanu operators is a “diverse and flourishin­g discipline”.

Atangana is ranked in the list owing to his cross-field contributi­on, which includes maths and applicatio­ns to real-world problems.

According to the university, Atangana has been a researcher for seven years. He received acknowledg­ement for his work in mathematic­s last year and moved to the cross-fields category this year. It said this year, 21 research fields across multiple fields earned this exclusive distinctio­n.

The university reported that Atangana became an editor of more than 20 top-tier journals of applied maths and maths, and for some journals he was the first African to ever be selected as editor.

Speaking to African News Agency (ANA), a humble Atangana said he did not see this as an achievemen­t but rather a statement.

“It shows that an African can do it. Most (mathematic­al) formulas are from Europe. So when I introduced my operator it was like a sense of decolonisa­tion. It shows Africans can also compete on the world stage,” Atangana said.

He said he hopes this recognitio­n shows others that they, too, can do whatever they set their mind to.

“Africa is alive. Many good can come from Africa. That’s why I work so hard. I work hard not for me, but for the African child. I want an African child to say they are proud to be from Africa because this formula they use is from Africa.” |

 ?? Professor Atangana ?? PROFESSOR Abdon Atangana hopes his internatio­nal recognitio­n will inspire other Africans. |
Professor Atangana PROFESSOR Abdon Atangana hopes his internatio­nal recognitio­n will inspire other Africans. |

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