“…Insightful studies are available about outstanding female physicists such as the first female professor in Europe, the 18 th century physicist Laura Bassi (Ceranski, 1996;Findlen, 1993) or the 1963 Nobel Prize winner Maria Goeppert Meyer, who between her doctoral dissertation at Göttingen University, Germany, in 1930 and her appointment as full professor at the University of California at San Diego, USA, in 1960 worked for 30 years as a poorly paid 'volunteer' in theoretical nuclear physics and during that time developed her nuclear shell model (Moszkowski, 2006, Willisch, 2008. Other findings spotlight on less celebrated physicists such as the researcher in quantum chemistry Hertha Sponer, who from 1920s to the 1960s worked as professor at universities in Göttingen/Germany, Oslo/ Norway, and Durham/USA (Maushart, 1997;Tobies, 1996), or the first Swedish female assistant professor Eva von Bahr, a productive scientist in Uppsala and Berlin between 1908and 1914(Wennerholm, 2009. Furthermore, Byers and Williams (2006) edited a collection of 40 biographies of women who contributed to twentiethcentury physics.…”