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Twin Stars: Ihsan and Zaki Hawkins Graduate as AU鈥檚 First Kay Scholars

Jazz, NASA, physics, and Chinese language鈥攖win brothers Ihsan and Zaki Hawkins made the most of their AU experience.

Ihsan and Zaki Hawkins.

It鈥檚 not every day you meet an undergraduate who speaks Mandarin, plays in a jazz band, and conducts space science research for NASA.

But at 麻豆传媒鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences, you can meet two: fraternal twins Ihsan and Zaki Hawkins.

This week, the twins will become the first graduates of AU鈥檚 new Kay Scholars Program鈥攃reated to honor the legacy of the late AU physicist Professor Dick Kay, who built a student-centered lab at NASA Goddard that later grew into AU鈥檚 Integrated Space Science and Technology Institute (ISSTI). Funded through a generous bequest by his wife Judy, the Kay Scholars Program supports exceptional undergraduates in physics鈥攕tudents like Zaki and Ihsan.

Physics Professor Silvina Guidoni says it was 鈥渁n absolute joy鈥 to have Ihsan and Zaki in her courses. She also mentored Zaki on a Physics Capstone project that literally set its sights on the stars.

鈥淭he project focused on modeling the Venus flybys of NASA鈥檚 Parker Solar Probe as it dove closer to the Sun,鈥 she explains. 鈥淲e met regularly to unravel the physics behind space travel, diving into Kepler鈥檚 laws, the rocket equation, and even a bit of scattering theory. The project was inspired by a paper from renowned solar physicist Dana Longcope, and Zaki brought it to life with a fantastic Python Jupyter notebook that visualized velocity-space diagrams for different planetary encounters. His energy and excitement were infectious鈥攐ur meetings often felt like mission briefings at NASA!鈥

When the Sky鈥檚 the Limit

During their time at 麻豆传媒, the twins majored in Physics, minored in Chinese, performed in the AU Jazz Band (Ihsan plays the trumpet, Zaki plays the tuba), worked as undergraduate researchers for Black epiSTEMologies, and completed prestigious internships at institutions including the NASA Goddard Flight Center and Purdue University.

In addition, Zaki was awarded a grant and found time to referee basketball, watch sci-fi and anime, paint, play sports, read, and spend time with friends. Ihsan wrote music, played games, and worked for a local nonprofit teaching and tutoring younger students.

One of Zaki鈥檚 highlights at AU was his , where he worked on mapping coronal mass ejections鈥攇iant bursts of magnetized plasma from the Sun. That experience helped both brothers land a research opportunity with the Large Hadron Collider project at Purdue University.聽

鈥淭here we did some really cool stuff, mostly working on silicon pixel detector chips that track particles in the accelerator at CERN, the European Council for Nuclear Research,鈥 Zaki explains. Ihsan adds that it was his first real experience seeing the intersection of physics and engineering. He learned techniques like carbon fiber composite layups and how to operate a Computer Numeric Control (CNC) machine鈥攈ands-on skills that grounded his studies in real-world application.

Jazz: Patterns, Structures, and Creativity

The twins played in the AU Jazz Band for all four years, performing in more than 15 concerts. Music has been a lifelong passion for both.

鈥淢y dad bought me a trumpet when I was around six,鈥 Ihsan recalls. Although he initially taught himself by ear, it wasn鈥檛 until he started taking high-school physics classes that music truly clicked. 鈥淧hysics enhances my musical ability and vice versa,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 be able to do either as well as I do without the other. Now it鈥檚 a great stress reliever鈥攂eing able to express my emotions in this way. And playing with the AU Jazz Band is always a great time.鈥

Zaki was also drawn early on to the underlying patterns of music. He began by analyzing scales and chord progressions before his creativity took hold. He notes that many AU physics majors share this balance of structure and creativity. 鈥淚 have yet to find an AU physics major who wasn鈥檛 interested in music. There鈥檚 a stigma that physicists only do physics, but most of the physicists I know do a lot of extracurriculars to fuel their creativity鈥攕ometimes more than other majors.鈥

Different Directions, Shared Drive

Though their academic paths overlap鈥攑hysics, music, language鈥攖he twins approach problems in very different ways. Zaki is expressive and creative; Ihsan is reserved and technically minded.

Zaki credits their mother with helping him bridge his language-focused thinking with the logic of STEM. He recalls struggling to learn long division as a child, while Ihsan picked it up quickly. His mom reassured him the brothers simply had different learning styles. 鈥淪he knew my mind was more literature-oriented like hers,鈥 Zaki explains. 鈥淥nce I figured it out, the joy we felt together helped me see that I could do this. It helped me adjust my linguistic mind to a scientific world, which I found super cool.鈥

Choosing Physics and Chinese as majors challenged both sides of the twins鈥 brains. 鈥淭hat creative part of us is probably what drew us to music, too,鈥 Zaki says. 鈥淣ow Ihsan creates music, and I help him.鈥

And despite their parallel paths, there's no sibling rivalry between the twins. 鈥淚鈥檓 a competitive person, but my brother is my complement鈥攏ot my competitor,鈥 says Zaki. Ihsan agrees: 鈥淚n the moments that matter, I know I can count on someone who understands how I think.鈥

Looking Back, Looking Ahead

As they prepare to graduate, Zaki and Ihsan say they are filled with gratitude鈥攆or the opportunities they found at 麻豆传媒, the community they built, and the platform given to them as Kay Scholars.

鈥淚 would like to use this platform to highlight how few highly regarded STEM scientists are Black, and that it is a result of many things that have restricted Black students like me from having the opportunity to explore these further STEM opportunities,鈥 says Zaki.聽

Ihsan echoes that sentiment, reflecting on the power of different perspectives and the importance of fairness in opportunity. 鈥淓veryone who puts in the same amount of work should be considered an equal chance at an opportunity regardless of where they came from, who they are, or what perspective they have,鈥 he says.

The brothers are quick to thank Dick and Judy Kay, the AU physics community, and their parents for standing behind them every step of the way. Ihsan adds, 鈥淎nd thank you to the person receiving this alongside me, who grew up alongside me for 21 years and has been someone I can depend on, Zaki Hawkins.鈥

Looking ahead, Ihsan is keeping his options open as he explores graduate programs, hoping to find a path that weaves together his love for physics, music, and Chinese. Zaki will pursue a graduate degree in aerospace engineering at the University of Maryland, College Park. His dream? 鈥淪omething awesome and nerdy鈥攍ike a spaceship, a satellite, maybe even the Millennium Falcon.鈥

When asked if they expect to work together again in the future, Zaki says, 鈥淚 hope I鈥檒l have a life that will allow me to continue pursuing my hobbies just as AU has allowed me to鈥攚ith music, Chinese, sports, and physics. I would like to collaborate with Ihsan on something in the future, but since we鈥檙e not a monolith, I just hope that we can stretch our interests as far as possible, so that we can learn from each other in whatever we do. Maybe we can invent something super cool like Warp Drives in聽Star Trek!鈥