The Niels Bohr Archive's Monday 6 October 1997 at 14:15 History of Science Seminar Auditorium A Niels Bohr Institute Blegdamsvej 21 Copenhagen
Karl Hufbauer Professor, History of Science, University of California, Irvine
Niels Bohr and the Theoretical Reorientation of Astrophysics
Theory gained the ascendancy in astrophysics between the World Wars. Hitherto, a flood of new kinds of data acquired with a succession of novel physical instruments had dominated this important astronomical subdiscipline which had come into being in the 1860s-70s. During the inter-war decades, however, theorists replaced instrumentalists and observers as the field's most innovative researchers and prominent spokesmen. This talk on the theoretical reorientation of astrophysics will focus on the several roles of Niels Bohr, his Institute, and his disciples in this process. In particular, Bohr'ss contributions to atomic physics provided powerful tools for theorists investigating stellar elemental abundances and structures; his Institute and its informal conferences served his disciples Svein Rosseland and George Gamow as models respectively for the Oslo Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics and a significant interdisciplinary conference of 1938 on the stellar-energy problem; and his optimism about theoretical physics' far-ranging prospects helped inspire several of his Institute's former affiliates -- most notably, Gamow, Lev Landau, Edward Teller, and Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker -- to venture into astrophysical research.
============================================ Gustav Holmberg, Graduate Student, History of Science and Ideas, Lund University, Sweden. [log in to unmask]
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