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  1. Margrethe Nørlund Bohr (7 March 1890 – 21 December 1984) was the Danish wife of and collaborator, editor and transcriber for physicist Niels Bohr who received the Nobel Prize. She also influenced her son, Nobel Prize winner Aage Bohr.

    • Danish
    • Margrethe Nørlund, 7 March 1890, Slagelse, Denmark
    • Editor
    • 21 December 1984 (aged 94), Copenhagen, Denmark
  2. The correspondence brings new understanding to the origins of Bohr’s atomic model and presages the role that Margrethe was going to play throughout Bohr’s life. Key words: Niels Bohr; Margrethe Nørlund; Harald Bohr; correspondence; Bohr atomic model; scientific creativity; literature; spouses. * Niels Bohr Archive, Blegdamsvej 17, DK-2100 ...

  3. Niels Bohr y Margrethe Nørlund se conocieron en la Universidad de Copenhague en 1910, donde ambos estaban estudiando matemáticas. Durante su carrera, Bohr y Nørlund se hicieron amigos cercanos y se mantuvieron en contacto incluso después de graduarse.

  4. 5 de jun. de 2013 · The path to the quantum atom. John L. Heilbron. Nature 498 , 27–30 ( 2013) Cite this article. 16k Accesses. 23 Citations. 37 Altmetric. Metrics. John L. Heilbron describes the route that led...

    • John L. Heilbron
    • john@heilbron.eclipse.co.uk
    • 2013
  5. hmn.wiki › es › Margrethe_BohrMargarita Bohr

    Margrethe Nørlund Bohr (7 de marzo de 1890 - 21 de diciembre de 1984) fue la esposa danesa y colaboradora, editora y transcriptora del físico Niels Bohr, quien recibió el Premio Nobel. También influyó en su hijo, el ganador del Premio Nobel Aage Bohr.

  6. On the basis of Bohr’s continued correspondence with Margrethe Nørlund and his family in Denmark, this chapter sheds further light on Bohr’s successful stay in Manchester with Ernest Rutherford (from March to July 1912) and his crucial change of interest there from electron theory to an understanding of the nuclear atom.

  7. 27 de ene. de 2014 · Margrethe Nørlund and Niels Bohr married in 1912 outside of the Danish Lutheran Church in a civil ceremony. They were both uneasy about the official status of the religion.