she recieved a novel award of quimics theory.
Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze was born in 1758.
Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze died in 1836.
Yes, By Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze
From scienceworld.wolfram.com: He married a young, beautiful 13-year-old girl named Marie-Anne, who translated from English for him and illustrated his books.
Yes, Antoine Lavoisier's wife, Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze, was not guillotined during the French Revolution. She successfully petitioned for her husband's release from prison before his execution, and went on to have a successful career in translating scientific texts.
I believe she received two Nobel prizes possibly among other awards.
Nicole Milinaire's birth name is Nicole Marie Charlotte Pierrette Jeanne Schneider.
Marie Paulze Lavoisier was instrumental in bringing his experiments to publication as she translated documents and illustrated his scientific texts with incredible competence and efficiency.
LaVoisier was married to Marie-Anne Paulz when he was 28 and she was 13. Their marriage had nothing to do with love or passion -- most marriages between aristocrats at that time were for money or prestigue -- but was a favor that Antoine did for his friend, Jacques Paulz, who wanted to prevent Marie-Anne from marrying someone else. There is no way of knowing if the couple had any intention of having children, or even the extent of passion within their marriage. Either could have been infertile, or they could have viewed their marriage as a legal sham with no intention of consumating it. We can never know.
André-Marie Ampère, a pioneering French physicist and mathematician, is best known for his foundational work in electromagnetism. While he did not receive many formal awards during his lifetime, he was honored posthumously when the unit of electric current, the ampere, was named after him. Additionally, he was elected to the French Academy of Sciences and is celebrated as one of the founding figures of the field of electrodynamics. His legacy is further recognized in various scientific honors and institutions named in his memory.
no
Marie Curie