There are many famous scientists, 
e.g. Niels Bohr.
Karen Blixen.
Niels Bohr.
Søren Kierkegaard.
Lars Ulrich from Metallica.
And of course the University of Copenhagen,
it's very famous.
It has been a great option for me to come
to Copenhagen and study physics 
at the Niels Bohr Institute.
I'm completing my last year of studies at
the Dark Cosmology Centre at the Niels Bohr
Institute, and for my master's thesis I'm
working on a new method to measure the full
3-dimensional shape of galaxy clusters. These
clusters are the biggest structures in the
Universe, and the oldest, so knowing the shape
would provide us with some new information
about the origin of the Universe.
Here at the Niels Bohr Institute we draw on
a long scientific tradition reaching back
to Hans Christian Ørsted, and of course to
Niels Bohr himself. So while Denmark is a
quite small country, it has played a very
important role internationally in physics,
particularly in the last 100 years.
As a master's student here you are free to
choose all the courses in your study plan,
and there is no such thing as compulsory classes,
which means you can just pick whatever you
find interesting. At the same time we are
encouraged to critical thinking, and to join
one of the groups here, which means that I
feel really close to the actual science here.
Here at the Niels Bohr Institute we offer
all of our master's courses in English,
and this is in a wide variety of fields - from
particle physics to geophysics, biophysics,
astronomy and astrophysics, and metorology,
and of course we have the technological facilities
to offer courses in the latest research methods.
So the students here really have a magnificent
opportunity to contribute to physics projects,
both internationally and in Denmark,
and they can do this already as
part of their master's thesis.
I really feel that Copenhagen is a pretty
city. It's a capital with many young people,
and there is always something going on. The
Danes have a nice, relaxed life style, 
and I always feel very welcome here.
Studying at the Niels Bohr Institute at the
University of Copenhagen has given me a network,
some skills, and some possibilities that I
believe are very important for my future career.
