Aage Bohr

@Danish Men, Career and Childhood

Aage Niels Bohr was a Nobel Prize winning nuclear physicist

Jun 19, 1922

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: June 19, 1922
  • Died on: September 9, 2009
  • Nationality: Danish
  • Famous: Danish Men, Scientists, Physicists
  • Spouses: Bente Scharff Meyer, Marietta Soffer
  • Known as: Aage Niels Bohr
  • Childrens: Margrethe, Tomas, Vilhelm

Aage Bohr born at

Copenhagen, Denmark

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Birth Place

In March 1950, while he was living in the New York City, Bohr married Marietta Soffer. The couple had three children - two sons, Vilhelm and Tomas, and a daughter, Margrethe. Among them, Tomas became a Professor of Physics at the Technical University of Denmark and works in the field of fluid dynamics. Marietta died on 2 October 1978

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Personal Life

In 1981, Bohr married Bente Scharff Meyer. The union lasted till his death in 2009.

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Personal Life

Aage Bohr enjoyed classical music and loved to play the piano. He died in Copenhagen on 9 September 2009 at the age of 87.

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Personal Life

Aage Niels Bohr was born on 19 June, 1922 in Copenhagen, Denmark. His father, Niels Bohr was an eminent physicist, who received Nobel Prize for his contributions to the understanding of atomic structure and quantum theory in the same year Aage was born. His mother’s name was Margrethe Bohr (née Nørlund).

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Childhood & Early Life

He was the fourth of his parents’ six son, and spent his early childhood in his father’s quarter at the Institute of Theoretical Physics (later renamed as the Niels Bohr Institute) at the University of Copenhagen. Later, when he was about ten years old, the family moved to the mansion at Carlsberg.

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Childhood & Early Life

At both these places, they had several well-known scholars, many of whom were eminent physicists, and they used to visit them. Consequently, his childhood was spent in august company. However, he was the only child to benefit from it and develop an interest in physics. His other brothers took up different professions.

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Childhood & Early Life

Aage had his entire schooling at Sortedam Gymnasium (H. Adler's fæellesskole). In 1940, a few months after Hitler had occupied Denmark, he joined University of Copenhagen to study physics. By now, he had started assisting his father with writing articles and letters.

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Childhood & Early Life

In September, 1943 Hitler announced that all Jews should be deported to concentration camps. Although Aage’s parents were baptized Christians, his paternal grandmother, Ellen Adler Bohr was a Jew and this connection meant that the family was not really safe. The Germans also considered them as Jewish.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1946, soon after earning his master’s degree, Aage Bohr joined Institute for Theoretical Physics at the University of Copenhagen as research scholar. While working there, he became a member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey and moved to the U.S.A in early 1948.

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Career

Also from January 1949 to August 1950, he was a visiting fellow at Columbia University at New York. Here, he met Isidor Isaac Rabi, who created in him an interest in recent discoveries concerning the hyperfine structure of deuterium.

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Career

During this period, he also met James Rainwater, with whom he would later share the Nobel Prize in Physics. Rainwater talked to him about a variant of the drop model of the nucleus, earlier developed by Niels Bohr. However, unlike the earlier model, Rainwater’s model could explain a non-spherical charge distribution.

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Career

Bohr returned to Denmark in 1950 and started collaborating with Ben Mottelson on this research. Together they began comparing the theoretical work with experimental data. Subsequently, they were able to merge the shell model of Maria Goeppert-Mayer with Rainwater's concept of the drop model of the nucleus.

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Career

The results of these experiments were published in three papers in 1951, 1952 and 1953. Soon they began to be considered significant for the understanding and development of nuclear fusion. Much later, they were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for this work.

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Career

Aage N. Bohr is best remembered for his work with Ben R. Mottelson on the motion of subatomic particles. In this, he was inspired by the theories of James Rainwater, whom he had met at the Columbia University, New York.

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Major Works

Rainwater had created a variant of drop model, which hypothesized that a nucleus was like a balloon with balls inside; just as the balls cause disfiguration on the surface when they move around inside the balloon, the surface of the nucleus can also be distorted by movement of nucleons inside it.

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Major Works

Bohr was highly enthused by this theory and on returning to Copenhagen began experimenting with Mottelson on it. Ultimately, they independently established that the motion of subatomic particles can distort the shape of the nucleus.

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Major Works

It not only challenged the generally accepted theory that all nuclei are perfectly spherical, but also reconciled the shell model of Maria Goeppert-Mayer with the liquid drop model of James Rainwater.

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Major Works

The duo also published a two-volume monograph, titled ‘Nuclear Structure’. The first volume titled, ‘Single-Particle Motion’, appeared in 1969 and the second volume titled, ‘Nuclear Deformations’ was published in 1975.

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Major Works