Marie Curie investigated radio-active substances and discovered the elements Radium and Polonium. She won the Nobel Prize twice. She did her own institute and gave several other women physicists' jobs. Her daughter followed in her footsteps.
Marie Skolodowski was born on November 7, 1867 in Warsaw the capital of Poland. Both of her parents were school teachers. Marie's siblings were named Zosia, Bronia, Jozef, and Helena. Marie and her siblings all graduated with the highest grades in their class. Marie's father used to be a school principal but he lost his job to a Russian because he was loyal to Poland and a patriot.
Marie's mother got tuberculosis, a major infectious disease in the late nineteenth century. Marie's mother got the disease from her husband's brother who came to live with them. Unfortunately, Marie's mother died in 1878 from TB when Marie turned nine years old.
Marie was encouraged to study physical science by her cousin, Jozef Boguski. He was the director of the Warsaw museum of Industry. He allowed her to work on chemistry and physics* on weekends at the museum.
*Physics: a branch of science that investigates the four forces at work in the universe both on a large scale, as the solar system, or on a small scale, like in atoms.
A lot of cures
she slept around with a lot of men while she was married
she and her husband Pierre Curie discovered radiation and radium.Marie Curie did not invent anything but she discovered Radium and did a lot of work on radioactivity in the 1800s.
Marie Curie wasn't French. She was born in Poland. So she is from Warsaw, Poland. But she spend a lot of time living and learning at France.
She found out many things in science like, she found out two new elements in the periodic table. She soon became famous and scientists all over the world came to visit her.
A lot of cures
she slept around with a lot of men while she was married
Marie discovered a lot of stuff but some of them were dangerous such as polonium and radium
she and her husband Pierre Curie discovered radiation and radium.Marie Curie did not invent anything but she discovered Radium and did a lot of work on radioactivity in the 1800s.
Marie Curie wasn't French. She was born in Poland. So she is from Warsaw, Poland. But she spend a lot of time living and learning at France.
She found out many things in science like, she found out two new elements in the periodic table. She soon became famous and scientists all over the world came to visit her.
she , along with her husband perrie currie did a lot of work of Radioactivity. they also got a noble prize on their work. she discovered a radioactive element RADIUM
she , along with her husband perrie currie did a lot of work of Radioactivity. they also got a noble prize on their work. she discovered a radioactive element RADIUM
Marie Curie was born in poland. Marie loved Poland dearly. So, the element Polonium was named after her country. NOTICE:POLoniumPoland They both begin with the letters POL. Hope this answer helps you!
She died of Leukemia which was caused by being around so much radioactivity. Radioactivity can be helpful, but when you're around a lot of it for a long time (like Marie Curie and her husband Pierre was) it can damage you physically and mentally.
To collect data, a person must first know what they want to get data about. If someone wants data about horses, they would find a lot of horses and look at them for the data they would like to collect (such as color, size, or speed).
Like all good scientists, Pierre Curie and Marie Skłodowska Curie (the two did a lot of their work together, and she always included her Polish birth name when referring to herself), tested a phenomena -- the ionizing radiation coming out of uranium -- and made a conclusion based on the results of their experiments. Specifically, these two found that the degree of ionization from a compound with uranium depended only on the amount of uranium in a sample. This meant that whatever this radiation was, it was coming from the atoms of uranium itself, not from any chemical reaction between uranium and other materials. This discovery was a major shift in the idea that atoms were eternally immutable. The two later noted that two compounds containing uranium had more ionizing radiation than uranium itself, causing them to conclude that there must be some element even more radioactive than uranium. This hypothesis led them to search for these elements, and thus to find radioactive thorium, polonium and radium.