APS March Meeting 2017
Volume 62, Number 4
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2017;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session V40: Marie Curie - A 150th Birthday Celebration
2:30 PM–4:54 PM,
Thursday, March 16, 2017
Room: 387
Sponsoring
Units:
FPS CSWP
Abstract ID: BAPS.2017.MAR.V40.3
Abstract: V40.00003 : Marie Curie: Physicist and Woman
3:42 PM–4:18 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Ruth Howes
(Ball State Univ)
Marie Sklodowska was born in Warsaw on November 7, 1867. Girls were not
allowed to attend college in Poland, so Marie found a well-paying post as a
governess in rural village which she held for three years while helping her
older sister complete medical school in Paris. Then Marie moved to Paris and
graduated first in her class at the Sorbonne with a master's degree in
physics in 1893. In 1895, she married the talented young physicist, Pierre
Curie. Marie decided to investigate the radioactive components of the
mineral pitchblende for her dissertation. The work involved chemical
analysis of a ton of material in an unheated shed. Pierre joined her and at
the end of 1898, the Curies announced the discovery of radium and polonium.
Through 1899, Marie labored to measure the atomic weight of radium. In 1903,
Marie earned her doctorate, the first for a woman in France, and the Curies
split the Nobel Prize in Physics with Henri Becquerel. They became widely
known, besieged by the press and frequently invited to make presentations
and be awarded honors. They hated fame and both suffered bad health. In
April, 1906, Pierre Curie was struck by a wagon and killed instantly. Marie
was left as a single mother with two young daughters. Fortunately, the
Sorbonne hired her to fill Pierre's position. In 1911, she was rejected for
membership in the French Academy of Science because she was a woman. Also in
1911, she was accused of having an affair with a married French physicist
Paul Langevin. The resulting scandal hit the press and brought angry mobs to
her home. In the middle of this hullaballoo, she was informed that she had
won a second Nobel Prize, this time in Chemistry. When World War I broke
out, Marie mounted x-ray units on cars and became a heroine. She visited the
United States in 1921 where President Harding presented her with a gram of
radium. She continued her scientific studies in spite of declining health
until her death in 1934.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2017.MAR.V40.3