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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.

  2. Margrethe Nørlund entered Niels Bohr’s life in 1909 through her older brother, Niels Erik Nørlund, a fellow student of Bohr at the university. Margrethe and Niels Erik’s father was a pharmacist in the provincial town of Slagelse, some 60 miles south-west of Co­ penhagen. Niels and Margrethe were engaged in August 1910. It

  3. 27 de ene. de 2014 · The attentive audience of 92 was treated to insights from Vilhelm Bohr’s childhood experiences with his remarkable grandfather and especially with his grandmother, Margrethe (Nørlund) Bohr. Physics runs in the Bohr family. Niels Bohr famously proposed his atomic model 101 years ago in 1913.

  4. Margrethe Norlund. 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.

  5. Professor Bohr was married, in 1912, to Margrethe Nørlund, who was for him an ideal companion. They had six sons, of whom they lost two; the other four have made distinguished careers in various professions – Hans Henrik (M.D.), Erik (chemical engineer), Aage (Ph.D., theoretical physicist, following his father as Director of the Institute ...

  6. The wife and complement of Niels Bohr, Margrethe Norlund Bohr was an integral part of his life and his work. In Act I of Copenhagen , Bohr says that he is "a mathematically curious entity: not one but half of two."

  7. nbarchive.ku.dk › about_us › past-present-futurePast – Niels Bohr Archive

    In particular, a book by the prominent historian of science John L. Heilbron and NBA Director Finn Aaserud based on the otherwise closed early correspondence between Bohr and his fiancée Margrethe Nørlund, whom he was later to marry, sheds new light on Bohr both as a scientist and a person.