An Iranian nuclear physics professor has been killed in a bomb blast in the north of the capital, Tehran, state media has reported.
Massoud Mohammadi, a professor at Tehran University, was killed on Tuesday when a bomb strapped to a motorcycle was triggered by remote control outside his home.
"The explosion took place near the professor's home in Qeytariyeh neighborhood, in northern Tehran," the state-run Press TV said.
It said Mohammadi was a "staunch supporter" of Iran's 1979 revolution and that he was "assassinated in a terrorist act by counter-revolutionary elements".
The broadcaster said police and security officials have launched an investigation.
Iranian media reports described Mohammadi as a nuclear energy professor, citing Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi, the Tehran prosecutor.
"Massoud Ali-Mohammadi was a professor in the nuclear field and there has so far been no arrests of those behind this incident," the Fars News Agency reported.
Disputed nuclear program
Al Jazeera's Alireza Ronaghi, reporting from Tehran, said Mohammadi might have had links to Iran's disputed nuclear program.
"Authorities who decided to remain unnamed tell me that Mohammadi had some connections with Iran's nuclear program and this could be related," he said.
He said it was unclear who might have been behind the bombing.
"Anyone who is connected to Iran's nuclear program could be an easy target for [foreign] intelligence services.
"Iran tries to protect its nuclear scientists very well but sometimes things get out of hand, and incidents like this happen."
Scientists 'intimidated'
Baqer Moin, an Iranian author and journalist in London, said Iranian media have accused "Zionist agents" as being behind the blast.
"They are looking towards people who are interested in delaying the Iranian nuclear program. Websites close to the [Iranian] authorities are making these statements," he told Al Jazeera.
"There have been in the past reports that many nuclear scientists or people who wanted to join the Iranian nuclear organization have been intimidated.
"There also were claims of other assassinations. But this is the first time in recent months that in Tehran such an occurrence has happened."
Western powers, including the US, accuse Iran of covertly seeking to develop atomic weapons.
They demand that Iran accept a UN brokered offer that would delay Iran's ability to make a nuclear weapon as well as engage in broader talks with the ultimate goal of persuading it to stop its enrichment program.
Iran says its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.
PHOTO CAPTION
A Press TV station image shows Iranian municipality workers sweeping up shattered glass at the scene of a bomb blast that killed an Iranian university lecturer in Tehran.
Al-Jazeera