He entered the Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences as a trainee researcher afterwards. He went to Moscow State University and Soviet Academy of Sciences for the further studying on physics since 1959.[1][2]
Hao had meant to become a postgraduate under Lev Landau, but Landau was injured in a road accident in 1962, he returned to China without a postgraduate diploma.[3]
He continued his job in CAS until the Cultural Revolution began. During the decade, he participated the Task 1019 for the military.[4] Hao was elected as an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1980. Hao took interdisciplinary research programmes later, he also sequenced DNA since 1997.[1]
Personal life
Hao had three siblings. Their father, Jingsheng was a botanist, thus Bailin was supposedly named after a Chinese native tree, Cupressus funebris.
Hao met Zhang Shuyu, a Chinese student from Jiangxi province, in Kharkiv. They married in the late 1950s, and had two children.
^ ab中国大百科全书(第二版) [Encyclopedia of China (2nd Edition)] (in Chinese). Vol. 22. Encyclopedia of China Publishing House. 2009. pp. 294–95. ISBN978-7-500-07958-3.