Basak was born in Radhanagor of Pabna town, Bengal Presidency, British India to parents Haripada Basak and Usha Rani Basak.[3] Basak matriculated in 1957 securing First Division from R.M. Academy. He secured the second position in the merit list in the Intermediate Science Examination in 1959 from Govt. Edward College. He was placed in First Class with the first position in the B.Sc. (Hons) examination from Rajshahi College in 1961. In M.Sc. Examination (1963) from the University of Rajshahi, he obtained the first position in first class and was awarded an RU Gold medal.[4]
Career
In December 1963, Basak joined the University of Rajshahi as a lecturer in the Department of Physics. In 1978, Basak was appointed as an associate professor by the University of Dhaka, but he preferred to stay in Rajshahi where he became associate professor in the later part of 1978.[5]
He was awarded a merit scholarship for securing the highest marks in the Faculty of Science and got admission at Imperial College, London. Owing to the 1965 Indo-Pak war, he could not avail the opportunity. In 1972, he went to the University of Birmingham with a Commonwealth Scholarship. He worked with the tensor polarized deuteron and the polarized 3He beams, the latter being the only one of its kind in the world. He earned his Ph.D. degree in 1975.[4]
^DUMAA (September 30, 2011). "Professor Arun K. Basak: Emeritus Professor of Physics in Bangladesh". In Choudhury, Prof. Shamima (ed.). Dhaka University Microbiology Alumni Association (DUMAA) News Letter and Science News. Dhaka: Dhaka University Microbiology Alumni Association. pp. 5, 6, 8.