Niels Bohr AKA Niels Henrik David Bohr Born: 7-Oct-1885 Birthplace: Copenhagen, Denmark Died: 18-Nov-1962 Location of death: Copenhagen, Denmark Cause of death: Stroke Remains: Buried, Assistens Cemetery, Copenhagen, Denmark
Gender: Male Religion: Lutheran Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Physicist Nationality: Denmark Executive summary: Father of Quantum Theory Danish physicist Niels Bohr studied under J. J. Thomson, who discouraged his ideas, and under Ernest Rutherford, whose work was expanded by Bohr into a new theory on the structure of the atom in 1913. Bohr postulated that electrons travel in fixed orbits around the atom's nucleus, and further explained how electrons emit or absorb energy, work that earned him the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1922. Bohr's atomic diagram held that the outer orbits hold more electrons than inner orbits, that atoms traveling from one orbit to another emit tiny amounts of radiation, and that these orbits determine chemical properties of an atom.
Bohr's theory, elaborated and expanded by other physicists, formed the basis for the developing science of quantum mechanics. He is best known for two concepts — the correspondence principle, and the complementarity principle. The former holds that to untangle the contradictions between "old" and "new" physics, new theories must both describe atomic phenomena correctly and be applicable to conventional phenomena; the latter holds that wave and particle aspects of nature are complementary and can never both be true simultaneously.
Though raised and baptized a Christian, his mother was Jewish, and Bohr fled Denmark during World War II, coming to America, where he worked on the Manhattan Project. After the war he became an outspoken activist against nuclear weapons and for the peaceful use of atomic energy. He was also a co-founder of the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN).
Bohr's brother, mathematician Harald August Bohr (1887-1951), developed a theory of "almost periodic" functions, and won a Silver Medal playing soccer for the Danish national team in the 1908 Olympics. Niels Bohr's son, Aage N. Bohr, won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1975 for describing the collective model of the atomic nucleus. Father: Christian Bohr (lecturer in physiology) Mother: Ellen Adler Bohr (b. 7-Oct-1860, m. 1881) Sister: Jennifer ("Jenny", b. 1883) Brother: Harald August Bohr (mathematician, b. 1887, d. 22-Jan-1951) Wife: Margrethe Norlund (m. 1-Aug-1912, six sons) Son: Aage N. Bohr (physicist and Nobel Laureate, b. 19-Jun-1922, d. 8-Sep-2009) Son: Erik Bohr (chemist) Son: Ernest Bohr (attorney) Son: Hans Henrik Bohr (physician)
High School: Gammelholm Grammar School, Copenhagen (1903) University: MA Physics, University of Copenhagen (1909) University: PhD Physics, University of Copenhagen (1911) Lecturer: Physics, University of Copenhagen (1913-14) Lecturer: Physics, Victoria University of Manchester (1914-16) Professor: Theoretical Physics, University of Copenhagen (1916-62) Administrator: Institute of Theoretical Physics, University of Copenhagen (1920-62)
Nobel Prize for Physics 1922 Hughes Medal 1921 Matteucci Medal 1923 Copley Medal 1938 United States Atoms for Peace Award 1957
Sonning Prize 1961 American Academy of Arts and Sciences Foreign Honorary Member American Philosophical Society 1940 CERN Co-Founder (1954) Pontifical Academy of Sciences Royal Danish Academy of Sciences 1917
Royal Danish Academy of Sciences President (1938-62)
Royal Institution of Great Britain (Foreign Member) Royal Society 1926 (Foreign Member) Royal Society of Edinburgh 1927 (Foreign Member) Manhattan Project Stroke Chemical Element Namesake bohrium (Bh, 107) Lunar Crater Bohr (12.8°N 86.4°W, 71 km. diameter) Asteroid Namesake 3948 Bohr Danish Ancestry Paternal
Jewish Ancestry Maternal
Author of books:
The Philosophical Writings of Niels Bohr (1987, essays; three volumes) Niels Bohr: Collected Works (2008, thirteen volumes)
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