Klaus Keil
Klaus Keil was a professor at the School of [Ocean and Earth Science and Technology] at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. He was the former Director of the Hawaiʻi [Institute of Geophysics and Planetology]. He was also the former director of the University of New Mexico Institute of Meteoritics. Keil pioneered the use of the electron microprobe to study meteorite samples. He was one of the co-inventors of the energy dispersive X-ray spectrometer.
In 1988, Keil won the Leonard Medal, which is awarded by the Meteoritical Society. In 2006, he won the J. [Lawrence Smith Medal], which is awarded by the United [States National Academy of Sciences|National Academy of Sciences]. These awards are for his pioneering quantitative studies of minerals in meteorites and important contributions to understanding the nature, origin, and evolution of their parent bodies.
Asteroid 5054 Keil and the mineral keilite are named after him.
Keil is the father of professional tennis players Mark Keil and Kathrin Keil.