In their historical article “Enrico Fermi in Rome, 1931–32” (Physics Today, Physics Today 0031-9228 556200228 https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1496372June 2002, page 28 ), authors Hans A. Bethe and Henry Bethe state, “One of Fermi’s colleagues observed the band spectrum of gaseous nitrogen and found that nitrogen nuclei obey Bose statistics.” I offer a clarification. Indeed, Franco Rasetti observed the rotational Raman spectrum of gaseous N2 in 1929. However, Walter Heitler and Gerhard Herzberg were the ones who recognized the difference in intensity alternation of rotational lines from that in H2: Even-numbered lines were more intense than the odd-numbered lines. Heitler and Herzberg therefore concluded that N nuclei obey Bose statistics. 1 The explanation was, of course, only clarified after the discovery of the neutron three years later.

1.
W.
Heitler
,
G.
Herzberg
,
Naturwiss.
17
,
673
(
1929
).