Radioactive Substances

by Marie CURIE (1867 - 1934)

Introduction

Radioactive Substances

Marie Curie, born in Warsaw in 1867, was a Polish-French physicist and chemist famous for her work on radioactivity. She was a pioneer in the field of radioactivity and the first person honored with two Nobel Prizes - in physics (1903) and chemistry (1911). The risks of working with strongly radioactive materials were not known at that time, and she eventually died in 1934 from an illness likely caused by radiation poisoning. Radioactive Substances is the thesis of Marie Curie, presented to the Faculté de Sciences de Paris in 1903, and subsequently published in "Chemical News" vol 88, 1903. Marie Curie gives a detailed description of her research on radioactive substances carried out at the Sorbonne. She details how she obtained the two new elements radium and polonium from pitchblende, explains her numerous experiments and presents measurements of all kinds. (Summary by Availle)


Listen next episodes of Radioactive Substances:
Chapter III: Radiation of the New Radioactive Substances, pt 2 , Chapter III: Radiation of the New Radioactive Substances, pt 3 , Chapter III: Radiation of the New Radioactive Substances, pt 4 , Chapter IV: Communication of Radioactivity to Substances Initially Inactive, pt 2 , Chapter IV: Communication of Radioactivity to Substances Initially Inactive, pt 3 , Chapter I: Radioactivity of Uranium and Thorium , Chapter II: Method of Research, pt 1 , Chapter II: Method of Research, pt 2 , Chapter III: Radiation of the New Radioactive Substances, pt 1 , Chapter IV: Communication of Radioactivity to Substances Initially Inactive, pt 1 , Nature and Cause of the Phenomena of Radioactivity