FACT #37
Marie Skłodowska Curie was a Polish and naturalized-French
physicist and chemist who conducted pioneering research on radioactivity. She
was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, is the only woman to win the Nobel
prize twice, and is the only person to win the Nobel Prize in two different
scientific fields. She was part of the Curie family legacy of five Nobel
Prizes. She was also the first woman to become a professor at the University of
Paris, and in 1995 became the first woman to be entombed on her own merits in
the Panthéon in Paris.
She was born in Warsaw, in what was then the Kingdom of
Poland, part of the Russian Empire. She studied at Warsaw's clandestine Flying
University and began her practical scientific training in Warsaw. In 1891, aged
24, she followed her older sister Bronisława to study in Paris, where she
earned her higher degrees and conducted her subsequent scientific work. She
shared the 1903 Nobel Prize in Physics with her husband Pierre Curie and
physicist Henri Becquerel. She won the 1911 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
Her achievements included the development of the theory of
radioactivity (a term she coined), techniques for isolating radioactive
isotopes, and the discovery of two elements, polonium and radium. Under her
direction, the world's first studies were conducted into the treatment of
neoplasms using radioactive isotopes. She founded the Curie Institutes in Paris
and in Warsaw, which remain major centres of medical research today. During
World War I she developed mobile radiography units to provide X-ray services to
field hospitals.
While a French citizen, Marie Skłodowska Curie, who used
both surnames, never lost her sense of Polish identity. She taught her
daughters the Polish language and took them on visits to Poland. She named the
first chemical element she discovered polonium, after her native country.
Marie Curie died in 1934, aged 66, at a sanatorium in
Sancellemoz (Haute-Savoie), France, of aplastic anemia from exposure to
radiation in the course of her scientific research and in the course of her
radiological work at field hospitals during World War I.
FACT #37
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on
September 28, 2019
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