When Maria Sklodowska left Warsaw for Paris in the autumn of 1891, her dream was to quickly complete university and return to her beloved Poland. Russia had controlled her homeland for decades, and Maria had determined in childhood to devote herself to the preservation of Polish culture. But her life changed in Paris. She decided to commit her life to experimental science, and she fell in love with physicist Pierre Curie. The young couple married and began to work obsessively to uncover the secrets of atomic structure. In their years together, Marie and Pierre discovered three new elements and revealed how radioactivity works. Their breakthroughs made them world famous, and Marie became the first woman awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics. She won a second Nobel prize in chemistry after Pierre's premature death and became, along with Albert Einstein, one of the world's most famous scientists. Marie Curie lived a fascinating life during an exciting and tragic period of scientific discovery and political upheaval. This new biography vividly retells her story within the context of her era for a new generation of readers. Book jacket.
98, contains a diagram abstracted from Brown's works which spells out some of the essential relationships between the diseases that Brown thought obtained in living systems 8Beddoes was reluctant to recommend opium, even in very small ...
Marie Curie follows the career of one of the first women scientists who discovered radium and made X-rays possible.
Marie Curie: Discoverer of Radium
居里夫人
A biography of the Polish-born chemist who was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1903 for the discovery of radium.
Autobiography of George Christian Hoffmann, LL.D., F.I.C., M.M.S., F.R.S.C.
弗里茨·伦敦: 科学传记
The Value of Learning: The Tale of Marie Curie
本书记录了吴浩青先生波澜壮阔,爱国奉献,成就卓著的一生,展现了老一辈科学家严谨求实的科学精神和放眼全球,前瞻未来的胆识谋略.
Harry Hammond Hess: May 24, 1906-August 25, 1969