Here is a List of "red-link scientists".
Feel free to click on the red link, to start an article (or stub of an article).
Some say that there should not be too many "red-link scientists" in an article.
He is a signatory (or one of the important persons, that signed the important papers) of the 2001 Bonn meetings where the interim government of Afghanistan was created[4][5][6][7][8]
he directed the excavations in Bamiyan and Hadda on the sites of Tape Shotor and Tape Tope Kalan; he is an archaeologist.[9][10]
Armenia
Artem Alikhanian (known as the "father of Armenian physics")[11] Test
Boris Babaian[12][13][14][15][16] - he got the awards (from the Soviet Union): the USSR State Prize for his achievements in 1974 in the field of computer-aided design, and the Lenin Prize in 1987 for the Elbrus-2 supercomputer design. Since 1984, he has been a corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences (later - Russian Academy of Sciences)
Askar Dzhumadildayev[26][27][28] - member of the Kazakhstan National Academy of Science.[29] He is a former member of Supreme Council of Kazakh SSR and Republic of Kazakhstan; he is a mathematician and physicist.
Kyrgyzstan
Askar Akayev - he is a former president of Kyrgyzstan; he is a natural scientist.
Kasym Tynystanov - he was the first Minister of Education of the Kyrgyz Republic; linguist; he died in 1938
Laos
Daosavanh Sanamxay - the discoverer of the Laotian giant flying squirrel(en);[30] biologist
Bountiem Phissamay. He is (as of 2010) Minister, Head of the Science, Technology and Environment Organisation of Laos[31]
Nepal
Gehendra Shumsher (He is generally thought of as the first scientist of Nepal)
Kumud Dhital - he is one of the members of the team that first transplanted a heart donated after circulatory death (DCD), where the heart has stopped beating;[32] he is a surgeon.
Kyong Wonha - he is a nuclear scientist who may have been working for the North Korean nuclear program. He defected in 2002, media said.
Ri Sung-gi (He is the inventor of Vinalon, and he got the Lenin Prize)
South Korea
Hwang Woo-suk - he was convicted of bioethicalviolations and was punished with a suspended prison sentence [which means that he did not automatically have go go to prison][34][35] In 2006 he said he had faked scientific findings.[36] - he is a scientist within Theriogenology (en), biotechnology.
Yanghee Choi - he is a former minister of Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning;[37] he is a computer scientist.
[39][40][41][42][43][44][45][46][47] - he was the first Thai scholar to conduct a serious study of Thai folkloristics, taking notes on the nocturnal village spirits of Thai folklore; the anthropologist and ethnographer died in 1969
Vietnam
Bùi Tường Phong - he was the inventor of the Phong reflection model (en) and the Phong shading interpolation method, techniques widely used in computer graphics; the computer scientist died in 1975.
Bửu Hội - the prince was a diplomat and medical researcher (of cancer); also known as Nguyễn Phúc Bửu Hội.
Jane Luu - she got the award, the Kavli Prize (shared with two others) for 2012 “for discovering and characterizing the Kuiper Belt and its largest members ...";[71] she is an astronomer.
Ngô Bảo Châu - best known for proving the fundamental lemma for automorphic forms (en). He is the first Vietnamese national to have received the Fields Medal;[72][73][74][75][76] mathematician
Nam-Trung Nguyen - researcher of microfluidics and nanofluidics, both within engineering
Nguyễn Xuân Vinh - he won the Dirk Brouwer Award (en), given by the American Astronautical Society;[77] he is an aerospace engineer.
Trịnh Xuân Thuận - he got the awards, the Kalinga Prize and Prix mondial Cino Del Duca; he is an astrophysicist.[81]
Tuan Vo-Dinh - he has been ranked No. 43 on a list of the world's top 100 living geniuses in a survey conducted by Creators Synectics, a global consultants firm;[82] biologist
Võ Quý - he got the award, the Blue Planet Prize (en) (from International Hydropower Association); the ornithologist died in 2017.
↑"Profile: Duy-Loan Le", Keynote speakers, Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing, presented by the Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology and the Association for Computing Machinery, 2010
↑"Profile: Duy-Loan Le", Keynote speakers, Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing, presented by the Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology and the Association for Computing Machinery, 2010
↑New ScientistMathematics 'Nobel' rewards boundary-busting work 19 August 2010 "Aside from Lindenstrauss, this year's winners were Ngô Bảo Châu of the University of Paris-South, France, Stanslav Smirnov of the University of Geneva, Switzerland, and Cédric Villani of the Henri Poincaré Institute, Paris, France."
↑The Australian Mathematical Society Asia Pacific Mathematics Newsletter April 2011 (pdf) Interview "Vietnamese Mathematician Ngô Bἀo Châu - From A Mathematical Olympiad Medallist to A Fields Medallist" pp. 25–30