



Niels
Bohr Memorial
Bohr, Niels Henrik
David (1885-1962), Danish physicist and Nobel laureate, who made basic
contributions to nuclear physics and the understanding of atomic structure.
Bohr was born in Copenhagen on October 7, 1885, the son of a physiology
professor, and was educated at the University of Copenhagen, where he earned
his doctorate in 1911. That same year he went to Cambridge, England, to
study nuclear physics under the British physicist Sir Joseph John Thomson,
but he soon moved to Manchester to work with Ernest Rutherford.
Bohr's theory of atomic structure (see Quantum Theory), for which he
received the Nobel Prize in physics in 1922, was published in papers between
1913 and 1915. His work drew on Rutherford's nuclear model of the atom,
in which the atom is seen as a compact nucleus surrounded by a swarm of
much lighter electrons (see Atom and Atomic Theory). Bohr's atomic model
made use of quantum theory and the Planck constant (the ratio between quantum
size and radiation frequency). The model posits that an atom emits electromagnetic
radiation only when an electron in the atom jumps from one quantum level
to another. This model contributed enormously to future developments of
theoretical atomic physics.
In 1916 Bohr returned to the University of Copenhagen as a professor
of physics, and in 1920 he was made director of the university's newly
formed Institute for Theoretical Physics. There Bohr developed a theory
relating quantum numbers to large systems that follow classical laws, and
made other major contributions to theoretical physics. His work helped
lead to the concept that electrons exist in shells and that the electrons
in the outermost shell determine an atom's chemical properties. He also
served as a visiting professor at many universities.
In 1939, recognizing the significance of the fission experiments (see
Nuclear Energy: Nuclear Energy from Fission) of the German scientists Otto
Hahn and Fritz Strassmann, Bohr convinced physicists at a scientific conference
in the U.S. of the importance of those experiments. He later demonstrated
that uranium-235 is the particular isotope of uranium that undergoes nuclear
fission. Bohr then returned to Denmark, where he was forced to remain after
the German occupation of the country in 1940. Eventually, however, he was
persuaded to escape to Sweden, under peril of his life and that of his
family. From Sweden the Bohrs traveled to England and eventually to the
United States, where Bohr joined in the effort to develop the first atomic
bomb, working at Los Alamos, New Mexico, until the first bomb's detonation
in 1945. He opposed complete secrecy of the project, however, and feared
the consequences of this ominous new development. He desired international
control.
In 1945 Bohr returned to the University of Copenhagen, where he immediately
began working to develop peaceful uses for atomic energy. He organized
the first Atoms for Peace Conference in Geneva, held in 1955, and two years
later he received the first Atoms for Peace Award. Bohr died in Copenhagen
on November 18, 1962.
"Bohr, Niels Henrik David," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 97 Encyclopedia.
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