Chemistry and physics.
Marie Curie was born in Warsaw, Poland, which at that time was part of the Russian Empire she later became a French Citizen, so was neither German or English.
Radium was first discovered by Pierre Curie and Marie Curie. At the time of their discovery they were working in the region of Bohemia, which at that time was part of the Austria-Hungarian Empire; and is now in the Czech republic.
Marie Curie tried to discover radium as part of her research into radioactivity. She isolated radium in 1898 along with her husband Pierre Curie by extracting it from uranium ore. Their work on radium led to groundbreaking discoveries in the field of radioactivity.
No. She was born in 1867 in Warsaw in the Kingdom of Poland which was part of the Russian Empire. She studied and worked in Poland before moving to Paris in 1891 to study and settled there in 1894, marrying Pierre Curie the following year. She contnued to work in Paris until her death in 1934. She was therefore Polish by birth and French by marriage. Since 'Victorian' is a period of British history spanning the reign of Queen Victoria, it is a label which should not be applied to Marie Curie, nor to any other non-British person.
Marie Curie discovered polonium and named it after Poland, the country of her birth, to publicise the fact that Poland was not free at that time, but part of the Russian Empire.
Marie Curie was the woman who discovered the elements polonium and radium, both of which are on the periodic table. She was a pioneering physicist and chemist who conducted groundbreaking research on radioactivity.
Because geography is the study of earth,but on science. Briefly,its an earth science.
Palaeontology is a branch of science and it's the study of dinosaur fossils.
The 84th element on the periodic table is polonium (Po). It is a rare radioactive metal that is part of the chalcogen group. Polonium was discovered by Marie Curie and her husband Pierre Curie in 1898.
a small part of physics
energy Hey patrick. lol. science wb
Yes, volcanoes are a part of physical science. The study of volcanoes falls under the branch of Earth science, specifically geology, which is a subfield of physical science. Volcanoes involve the study of processes such as magma movement, volcanic eruptions, and their impact on the environment.