The Women of NBI—Then and Now

Europe/Copenhagen
Auditorium 1 (August Krogh Building)

Auditorium 1

August Krogh Building

Universitetsparken 13, 2100 Copenhagen
Christian Joas (Niels Bohr Archive), Maren Malling (Kvinder i Fysik)
Description

About the conference:

Kvinder i Fysik (Women in Physics) and the Niels Bohr Archive proudly present this 2-day conference focusing on the role of women in the history of the Niels Bohr Insitute

Everyone is welcome to join!

Registration for the conference has closed on November 1st.

PLEASE NOTE: The conference will take place at Aud. 1, August Krogh Building, Universitetsparken 13, 2100 Copenhagen Ø.

Day 1 primarily features talks on historical women in the earliest days of the Insitute. The talks will cover scientists as well as important administrative staff and family members. Find the program for day 1 here.

Day 2 primarily features research and career talks by physicists currently connected to the Institute. Find the program for day 2 here.

The keynote presentation will be given by Anthea Coster from MIT Haystack Observatory about the life and reseach of Lise Meitner. This public event will take place at the Lundbeckfond Auditorium at Copenhagen Biocenter, Ole Maaløes Vej 5, 2200 Copenhagen N, on November 12 at 17:30-19:00 and does not require registration. More information can be found here

Confirmed speakers:

Anthea Coster MIT Haystack Observatory

Liselotte Højgaard Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen and DTU

Christian Joas Niels Bohr Archive

Namiko Mitarai Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen

Lene Oddershede Novo Nordisk Foundation

Sarah Pearson Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen

Bente Rosenbeck Department of Nordic Studies and Linguistics, University of Copenhagen

Anja Skaar Jacobsen KVUC and Department of Science Education, University of Copenhagen

Rob Sunderland Niels Bohr Archive

Irene Tamborra Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen

Elisabeth Ulrikkeholm FOSS

The conference will conclude with a panel discussion on day 2, and the panelists are:

Anja C. Andersen Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen

Anthea Coster MIT Haystack Observatory

Joachim Mathiesen Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen

Lif Lund Jacobsen, Natural History Museum Denmark, University of Copenhagen

 

Participants
  • Aditi Mehta
  • Ane Baden
  • Anja Cetti Andersen
  • Ann-Sofie Bak Nielsen
  • Anthea Coster
  • Atiqa Qarar
  • Barbro Åsman
  • Bente Rosenbeck
  • Carmen Gómez-Fayrén de las Heras
  • Carol Anne Oxborrow
  • Cecilie Cold
  • Chevarra Hansraj
  • Christa Gall
  • Christian Joas
  • Christine Hvidberg
  • Dorte Olesen
  • Elisa Maggio
  • Elisabeth Ulrikkeholm
  • Emilie Skulberg
  • Emma Lucinda Hesselholdt Beck-Nielsen
  • Freja Amalie Nørby
  • Frida Ebdrup Jørgensen
  • Hinza Tanveer
  • Irene Tamborra
  • Iris Jermann
  • Jaime Redondo Yuste
  • Jill Miwa
  • Johanne de Leon
  • Jose Maria Ezquiaga
  • Julie Kiel Holm
  • Lars Becker-Larsen
  • Laura Slumstrup
  • Lene Oddershede
  • Lenka Otap
  • Lorena Magaña Zertuche
  • Malene Flagga
  • Maren Malling
  • Maria Astefanoaei
  • MARIANNE LYKKE
  • Marica Minucci
  • Martin Speirs
  • Mor Lumbroso
  • Niels Obers
  • Nigar Abbasova
  • Rashmi Gottumukkala
  • RAYSSA Bruzaca de Andrade
  • Rob Sunderland
  • SARA GALLEGOS BUENROSTRO
  • Sarah Pearson
  • Sif Fugger
  • Signe Bendsen
  • Sudan Hansraj
  • Terese Hansen
  • Thea Guntofte
  • +35
  • Tuesday, 12 November
    • 12:15 12:30
      Opening 15m Auditorium 1

      Auditorium 1

      August Krogh Building

      Universitetsparken 13, 2100 Copenhagen
      Speaker: Maren Malling (Kvinder i Fysik)
    • 12:30 14:30
      Session 1 Auditorium 1

      Auditorium 1

      August Krogh Building

      Universitetsparken 13, 2100 Copenhagen
      • 12:30
        Hanna Adler and Kirstine Meyer: The first women physicists in DK 30m
        Speaker: Anja Skaar Jacobsen
      • 13:00
        Women in the Early History of NBI 30m
        Speaker: Christian Joas (Niels Bohr Archive)
      • 13:30
        At and Beyond the Frontline of Research 30m
        Speaker: Lene Oddershede
      • 14:00
        Discussion session 30m
    • 14:30 15:00
      Coffee break 30m Auditorium 1

      Auditorium 1

      August Krogh Building

      Universitetsparken 13, 2100 Copenhagen
    • 15:00 16:20
      Session 2 Auditorium 1

      Auditorium 1

      August Krogh Building

      Universitetsparken 13, 2100 Copenhagen
      • 15:00
        Margrethe Bohr 30m
        Speaker: Rob Sunderland
      • 15:30
        Hilde Levi 30m
        Speaker: Liselotte Højgaard
      • 16:00
        Discussion session 20m
    • 16:20 17:30
      Break and relocation 1h 10m

      We will relocate to the Lundbeckfond Auditorium at the Biocenter for the public talk with Anthea Coster.

    • 17:30 19:00
      Keynote presentation: Lise Meitner - Her Life and the Discovery of Fission 1h 30m Lundbeckfond Auditorium (Copenhagen Biocenter)

      Lundbeckfond Auditorium

      Copenhagen Biocenter

      Ole Maaløes Vej 5, 2100 København Ø

      Lise Meitner was one of the pioneers of nuclear physics and co-discoverer, with Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann, of nuclear fission. Albert Einstein once called her “the most significant woman scientist of the 20th century.” Yet by the 1970s, her name was nearly forgotten. With the publication of the book by Ruth Lewin Sime, “Lise Meitner, A life in physics,” to some extent her name has resurfaced. The chronology of the discovery of fission is considerably more complex than the facts, and clouded by events beyond the world of science. The facts are that on January 6, 1939, Hahn and Strassmann reported in Naturwissenschaften their chemical findings for fission. On February 11, 1939, Meitner and Frisch published in Nature the physical interpretation of the process they named fission. In 1944, Otto Hahn alone received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry “for his discovery of the fission of heavy nuclei.”

      I became familiar with Lise Meitner and her story when, in 1972, Dr. Sime started writing my father for details about Lise Meitner's escape from Germany. This is because in July 1938, my grandfather, Dirk Coster, was the person who escorted her out of Germany. In Sime's book, Meitner's escape from Germany reads like a spy novel, except that it is completely based in fact. At age 59, Meitner left Germany forever with 10 marks in her purse, one small suitcase, and a diamond ring given to her by Otto Hahn that he had inherited from his mother.

      This talk will be a combination of facts, excerpts from the film, “Path to Nuclear Fission: The Story of Lise Meitner and Otto Hahn” (a film by Rosemarie Reed), and personal stories heard from my father, aunts, and uncles. Lise Meitner's early years, her role in the discovery of nuclear fission, her escape from Germany, and the consequences that followed will be covered.

      Speaker: Anthea J. Coster
  • Wednesday, 13 November
    • 09:00 10:20
      Session 3 Auditorium 1

      Auditorium 1

      August Krogh Building

      Universitetsparken 13, 2100 Copenhagen
      • 09:00
        From Academia to Industry 30m
        Speaker: Elisabeth Ulrikkeholm
      • 09:30
        Biocompexity: A Physicist Approach to Life 30m
        Speaker: Namiko Mitarai
      • 10:00
        Discussion session 20m
    • 10:20 11:00
      Coffee break 40m Auditorium 1

      Auditorium 1

      August Krogh Building

      Universitetsparken 13, 2100 Copenhagen
    • 11:00 13:00
      Session 4 Auditorium 1

      Auditorium 1

      August Krogh Building

      Universitetsparken 13, 2100 Copenhagen
      • 11:00
        Julie Vinter Hansen 30m
        Speaker: Bente Rosenbeck
      • 11:30
        Decoding Dark Matter with Stellar Streams 30m
        Speaker: Sarah Pearson
      • 12:00
        Messengers of Cosmic Booms 30m
        Speaker: Irene Tamborra
      • 12:30
        Discussion session 30m
    • 13:00 14:30
      Lunch 1h 30m Canteen (Niels Bohr Building)

      Canteen

      Niels Bohr Building

      Jagtvej 132, 2200 Copenhagen N
    • 14:30 16:00
      Panel Discussion 1h 30m Auditorium 1

      Auditorium 1

      August Krogh Building

      Universitetsparken 13, 2100 Copenhagen

      Panelists:
      Anja. C. Andersen, Professor at NBI, University of Copenhagen
      Anthea J. Coster, Assistant Director, MIT Haystack Observatory
      Lif Lund Jacobsen, Natural History Museum Denmark, University of Copenhagen
      Joachim Mathiesen, Head of Institute, NBI, University of Copenhagen

      Moderator:
      Maren Malling, chair of Kvinder i Fysik