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  2. Marie Curie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_Curie

    Marie Curie's birthplace, 16 Freta Street, Warsaw, Poland. Maria Salomea Skłodowska-Curie [a] (Polish: [ˈmarja salɔˈmɛa skwɔˈdɔfska kʲiˈri] ⓘ; née Skłodowska; 7 November 1867 – 4 July 1934), known simply as Marie Curie (/ ˈ k j ʊər i / KURE-ee; [1] French: [maʁi kyʁi]), was a Polish and naturalised-French physicist and chemist who conducted pioneering research on ...

  3. List of inventors killed by their own invention - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_inventors_killed...

    Marie Curie (1867–1934) was a Polish-French physicist and chemist who conducted pioneering research on radioactivity and is credited for discovering radioactive polonium and radium. On 4 July 1934, she died at the Sancellemoz sanatorium in Passy, Haute-Savoie , from aplastic anaemia believed to have been contracted from her long-term exposure ...

  4. Treatise on Radioactivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treatise_on_Radioactivity

    Treatise on Radioactivity (French: Traité de Radioactivité) is a two-volume 1910 book written by the Polish scientist Marie Curie as a survey on the subject of radioactivity. [1] [2] [3] She was awarded her second Nobel Prize in the following year after the publication of the book. [4]

  5. UW Health to use new device that sits cancer patients upright ...

    www.aol.com/news/uw-health-device-sits-cancer...

    The more sophisticated option, which the Marie device and others use, is a high-energy proton beam. It is much more precise and has a lower threat of hitting other areas of the body.

  6. Women in physics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_physics

    L'Huillier is the first female laureate to receive 1/3 of monetary award of the Nobel Prize in Physics (Curie, Goeppert–Mayer, Strickland and Ghez received 1/4). Physicists and physicochemists that won a Nobel Prize in Chemistry include Marie Curie, [9] Irène Joliot-Curie, daughter of Marie Curie, in 1935, [10] and Dorothy Hodgkin in 1964. [11]

  7. Pierre Curie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Curie

    The Curie is a unit of measurement (3.7 × 10 10 decays per second or 37 gigabecquerels) used to describe the intensity of a sample of radioactive material and was named after Marie and Pierre Curie by the Radiology Congress in 1910.

  8. Women in chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Chemistry

    Marie Curie was the first woman to receive the prize in 1911, which was her second Nobel Prize (she also won the prize in physics in 1903, along with Pierre Curie and Henri Becquerel – making her the only woman to be award two Nobel prizes). Her prize in chemistry was for her "discovery of the elements radium and polonium, by the isolation of ...

  9. Man Who Found Newborn's Body in Church Safe Haven Box ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/man-found-newborns-body-church...

    The man who found a newborn's dead body inside a "thermal cradle" left for abandoned babies at an Italian church is opening up about the tragedy.. Roberto Savarese, a 56-year-old funeral director ...