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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. www.ilpost.it › 2012/10/07 › chi-era-niels-bohr-fisica-atomoChi era Niels Bohr - Il Post

    7 ott 2012 · Bohr sposò Margrethe Nørlund, sorella di un famoso matematico dellepoca, Niels Erik Nørlund. Ebbe sei figli, di cui due morti in giovane età a causa di un incidente in barca e di un attacco di...

  4. 5 giu 2013 · As their correspondence shows, Margrethe played an important, perhaps an essential, part in smoothing out Niels' mood swings and reassuring him that he was the great man his Danish support system...

    • John L. Heilbron
    • john@heilbron.eclipse.co.uk
    • 2013
  5. 7 mag 2021 · Danish: Margrethe Bohr (Nørlund) Birthdate: March 07, 1890. Birthplace: Slagelse, Sjælland, Danmark (Denmark) Death: 1984 (93-94) Immediate Family: Daughter of Alfred Kristian Nørlund and Emma Ottine Sophie Holm.

    • Sjælland
    • Slagelse, Sjælland, Danmark (Denmark)
    • Niels Bohr, Nobel Prize in Physics 1922
    • March 7, 1890
  6. 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.

  7. 5 giu 2013 · Quantum physics. One hundred years after Niels Bohr published his model of the atom, a special issue of Nature explores its legacy — and how much there is still to learn about atomic structure.