Marie Curie

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    Marie Curie once said “nothing in life is to be feared: it is only to be understood. Now is the time to understand more so that we may fear less.” Her words are very relevant to the contributions she did to today’s society. Marie was very persistent and dedicated when it came to her work that she even risked her health to pursue her studies. She was one of the first scientists to work with radioactivity and she, along with her husband, discovered two elements of the periodic table, polonium and

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    Did you know that Marie Curie had financial problems as a child? However, that didn't hinder her. She became the first woman to receive not just one Nobel prize, but two. Marie Curie influenced change in our world by not only being a scientist, but a woman activist through her outstanding achievements. She also looked further into what radium was capable of after Henri Becquerel discovered it, and not to mention her incredible discovery of the element polonium. Marie Curie became a woman activist

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    Although Marie Curie was not the first woman to excel in science or mathematics, she can be considered the first major woman scientist to receive full credit for her scientific work. Considering her Nobel prizes alone, she is ranked at the top of the scientists of the modern period. Despite this, somehow Marie Curie’s popular images, as well as those embedded in some of the scholarly literature, suggest important, but rather modest contributions to society (Pycior, 301). Marie Curie was born Maria

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    Encounter Marie Curie fits the theme perfectly in another way, encounter. She had a troublesome time getting the education she needed, and even when she presented a reasonable hypothesis, it was all but brushed off because she was not respected. Curie also had an encounter with the Solvay conference, which was a gathering of some of the greatest minds at the time. One of the most important things Curie did was help during World War One by inventing and distributing portable x-ray machines to help

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    When Obsession Becomes Deadly: The Life of Marie Curie Marie Curie, a pioneer in her field and Nobel Prize winning Chemist, took a path that few women of her time dared and unfortunately, her passion for Science would be her ultimate demise. From birth to death Marie Curie lived a full life, with love, work, and passion at the center. Maria Skłodowska was born in Warsaw, Poland, on 7 November 1867, the fifth and youngest child of well-known teachers Bronisława and Władysław Skłodowski. Maria's

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    Marie Curie is famously known to be one of the first women known to make very large contributions to science, and known as a distinguishable woman for receiving two Nobel Peace Prizes. However, looking past, her gender, her achievements as a scientist, not a female scientist, were remarkable. Today radium is most commonly known for its use to treat specific types of cancer. This remarkable treatment can be attributed to Marie Curie, yet still she known to be the “accomplished female scientist”. Gender

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    Shreya Vallimanalan 7-7 12/5/2015 Marie Curie and the Exploration of Radium During the early nineteenth century, French physicist Henri Becquerel observed radioactivity by recording how uranium emits radiation that is strong enough to blacken covered photographic plates. Scientists used to believe that uranium emitted “rays”, after they headed about Becquerel’s work. Later on, after Curie’s research, they came to know that those “rays” were actually very small particles. Wilhelm Roentgen discovered

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    inspiring people in my life; but if I had to chose just one, I’d chose Marie Curie. Marie Curie is my hero because she was the first woman to win two Nobel prizes, she discovered two radioactive elements, and that she dedicated her life to science. In 1903, Marie Curie won the Noble Physics Prize. Her and her husband won the Davy medal together. Despite having won in 1903, the couple didn’t make the trip to get awarded till 1905. Marie Curie was a big scientist in her time, so it wasn’t surprising that she

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    Marie Sklodowska was born in Warsaw, modern day Poland, on November 7, 1867. Her parents were both teachers, and she was the youngest of five siblings, Zosia, Józef, Bronya, and Hela. As a child Curie was said to take after her father, Wladyslaw, a math and physics instructor. She was a bright child and excelled at school. But when she was only 10, Curie lost her mother, Bronislawa, to tuberculosis. Marie received a general education in local schools and some scientific training from her father.

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    prizes, and done many other achievements. This scientist is the famous Marie Skłodowska Curie. She has done many things in her lifetime. She was poor and didn’t have a really good education but soon after she became the first scientist to find out about radioactivity and other things. She has even done good things that benefited the world. This all started on November 7, 1867, in Warsaw, Poland because this was day when Marie Skłodowska was born. She lived in a family with two parents who are teachers

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