Niels
Henrik David Bohr was born in Copenhagen on October 7, 1885, as the son of
Christian Bohr, Professor of Physiology at Copenhagen
University, and his wife Ellen, née Adler. Niels, together with his
younger brother Harald (the future Professor in Mathematics), grew up in an
atmosphere most favourable to the development of his genius - his father was an
eminent physiologist and was largely responsible for awakening his interest in
physics while still at school, his mother came from a family distinguished in
the field of education.
After matriculation at the Gammelholm Grammar School in 1903, he entered
Copenhagen University where he came under the guidance of Professor C.
Christiansen, a profoundly original and highly endowed physicist, and took his
Master's degree in Physics in 1909 and his Doctor's degree in 1911.
While still a student, the announcement by the Academy of Sciences in Copenhagen
of a prize to be awarded for the solution of a certain scientific problem,
caused him to take up an experimental and theoretical investigation of the
surface tension by means of oscillating fluid jets. This work, which he carried
out in his father's laboratory and for which he received the prize offered (a
gold medal), was published in the Transactions of the Royal Society, 1908.
Bohr's subsequent studies, however, became more and more theoretical in
character, his doctor's disputation being a purely theoretical piece of work on
the explanation of the properties of the metals with the aid of the electron
theory, which remains to this day a classic on the subject. It was in this work
that Bohr was first confronted with the implications of Planck's quantum theory
of radiation.
In the autumn of 1911 he made a stay at Cambridge, where he profited by
following the experimental work going on in the Cavendish
Laboratory under Sir
J.J. Thomson's guidance, at the same time as he pursued own theoretical
studies. In the spring of 1912 he was at work in Professor
Rutherford's laboratory in Manchester, where just in those years such an
intensive scientific life and activity prevailed as a consequence of that
investigator's fundamental inquiries into the radioactive phenomena. Having
there carried out a theoretical piece of work on the absorption of alpha rays
which was published in the Philosophical Magazine, 1913, he passed on to
a study of the structure of atoms on the basis of Rutherford's discovery of the
atomic nucleus. By introducing conceptions borrowed from the Quantum Theory as
established by Planck, which had gradually come to occupy a prominent position
in the science of theoretical physics, he succeeded in working out and
presenting a picture of atomic structure that, with later improvements (mainly
as a result of Heisenberg's ideas in 1925), still fitly serves as an elucidation
of the physical and chemical properties of the elements.
In 1913-1914 Bohr held a Lectureship in Physics at Copenhagen University and in
1914-1916 a similar appointment at the Victoria University in Manchester. In
1916 he was appointed Professor of Theoretical Physics at Copenhagen University,
and since 1920 (until his death in 1962) he was at the head of the Institute for
Theoretical Physics, established for him at that university.
Recognition of his work on the structure of atoms came with the award of the
Nobel Prize for 1922.
Bohr's activities in his Institute were since 1930 more and more directed to
research on the constitution of the atomic nuclei, and of their transmutations
and disintegrations. In 1936 he pointed out that in nuclear processes the
smallness of the region in which interactions take place, as well as the
strength of these interactions, justify the transition processes to be described
more in a classical way than in the case of atoms (Cf. »Neutron capture and
nuclear constitution«, Nature, 137 (1936) 344).
A liquid drop would, according to this view, give a very good picture of the
nucleus. This so-called liquid droplet theory permitted the understanding
of the mechanism of nuclear fission, when the splitting of uranium was
discovered by Hahn and Strassmann, in 1939, and formed the basis of important
theoretical studies in this field (among others, by Frisch and Meitner).
Bohr also contributed to the clarification of the problems encountered in
quantum physics, in particular by developing the concept of complementarily.
Hereby he could show how deeply the changes in the field of physics have
affected fundamental features of our scientific outlook and how the consequences
of this change of attitude reach far beyond the scope of atomic physics and
touch upon all domains of human knowledge. These views are discussed in a number
of essays, written during the years 1933-1962. They are available in English,
collected in two volumes with the title Atomic Physics and Human Knowledge and
Essays 1958-1962 on Atomic Physics and Human Knowledge, edited by John
Wiley and Sons, New York and London, in 1958 and 1963, respectively.
Among Professor Bohr's numerous writings (some 115 publications), three
appearing as books in the English language may be mentioned here as embodying
his principal thoughts: The Theory of Spectra and Atomic Constitution,
University Press, Cambridge, 1922/2nd. ed., 1924; Atomic Theory and the
Description of Nature, University Press, Cambridge, 1934/reprint 1961; The
Unity of Knowledge, Doubleday & Co., New York, 1955.
During the Nazi occupation of Denmark in World War II, Bohr escaped to Sweden
and spent the last two years of the war in England and America, where he became
associated with the Atomic Energy Project. In his later years, he devoted his
work to the peaceful application of atomic physics and to political problems
arising from the development of atomic weapons. In particular, he advocated a
development towards full openness between nations. His views are especially set
forth in his Open Letter to the United Nations, June 9, 1950.
Until the end, Bohr's mind remained alert as ever; during the last few years of
his life he had shown keen interest in the new developments of molecular
biology. The latest formulation of his thoughts on the problem of Life appeared
in his final (unfinished) article, published after his death: "Licht und
Leben-noch einmal", Naturwiss., 50 (1963) 72: (in English:
"Light and Life revisited", ICSU Rev., 5 ( 1963) 194).
Niels Bohr was President of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences, of the Danish
Cancer Committee, and Chairman of the Danish Atomic Energy Commission. He was a
Foreign Member of the Royal Society (London ), the Royal Institution, and
Academies in Amsterdam, Berlin, Bologna, Boston, Göttingen, Helsingfors,
Budapest, München, Oslo, Paris, Rome, Stockholm,
Uppsala, Vienna, Washington, Harlem, Moscow, Trondhjem, Halle, Dublin, Liege,
and Cracow. He was Doctor, honoris causa, of the following universities,
colleges, and institutes: (1923-1939)-Cambridge,
Liverpool, Manchester,
Oxford, Copenhagen, Edinburgh,
Kiel, Providence, California, Oslo,
Birmingham, London;
(1945-1962) - Sorbonne (Paris), Princeton,
Mc. Gill (Montreal), Glasgow,
Aberdeen, Athens, Lund,
New York, Basel, Aarhus,
Macalester (St.Paul), Minnesota,
Roosevek (Chicago, Ill.), Zagreb, Technion
(Haifa), Bombay, Calcutta, Warsaw, Brussels, Harvard,
Cambridge (Mass.), and Rockefeller
(New York).
Professor Bohr was married, in 1912, to Margrethe Nřrlund, 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
for Theoretical Physics), Ernest (lawyer).
Niels Bohr died in Copenhagen on November 18, 1962.
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