Keke Zhang, Fellow of American Geophysical Union and Royal Astronomical Society, Awardee of Royal Astronomical Society Group Achievement, UK, and the First-Prize Winner of the Macau Science and Technology Award, obtained his BSc in Astronomy from the University of Nanjing, China, in 1982, his MSc in Geophysics and Space Physics from UCLA, USA, in 1985, and his PhD in Geophysics and Space Physics from UCLA, USA, in 1987. After working as a Postal Doctoral Research Fellow at UCLA, USA, and at the University of Cambridge, UK (1987 to 1991), he was employed as a full-time professor (teaching and research) in College of Engineering, Mathematics and Physical Sciences, University of Exeter, UK, for nearly thirty years (1992 to 2021). He is currently Chair Professor and Associate Vice-President of Macau University of Science and Technology (2018 to 2023), as well as the director of Macau Institute of Space Technology and Application. His research areas include the theory and simulation of convection, instabilities and wave in rotating planetary fluids; planetary magnetohydrodynamics and dynamos; the shape, structure and gravity of giant gaseous planets; and planetary inverse problems. He has been the Chief Scientist of Macau Science Satellites, the first low-latitude geomagnetic satellites focusing on the study of the South Atlantic Anomaly, geomagnetic field modeling and Earth's core dynamo, which was successfully launched on 21 May 2023.