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  • If you want a glimpse of Marie Curie's manuscripts,

  • you'll have to sign a waiver and put on protective gear

  • to shield yourself from radiation contamination.

  • Madame Curie's remains, too, were interred in a lead-lined coffin,

  • keeping the radiation that was the heart of her research,

  • and likely the cause of her death, well contained.

  • Growing up in Warsaw in Russian-occupied Poland,

  • the young Marie, originally named Maria Sklodowska,

  • was a brilliant student, but she faced some challenging barriers.

  • As a woman, she was barred from pursuing higher education,

  • so in an act of defiance,

  • Marie enrolled in the Floating University,

  • a secret institution that provided clandestine education to Polish youth.

  • By saving money and working as a governess and tutor,

  • she eventually was able to move to Paris to study at the reputed Sorbonne.

  • There, Marie earned both a physics and mathematics degree

  • surviving largely on bread and tea,

  • and sometimes fainting from near starvation.

  • In Paris, Marie met the physicist Pierre Curie,

  • who shared his lab and his heart with her.

  • But she longed to be back in Poland.

  • Upon her return to Warsaw, though,

  • she found that securing an academic position as a woman

  • remained a challenge.

  • All was not lost.

  • Back in Paris, the lovelorn Pierre was waiting,

  • and the pair quickly married and became a formidable scientific team.

  • Another physicist's work sparked Marie Curie's interest.

  • In 1896, Henri Becquerel discovered that uranium spontaneously emitted

  • a mysterious X-ray-like radiation that could interact with photographic film.

  • Curie soon found that the element thorium emitted similar radiation.

  • Most importantly, the strength of the radiation

  • depended solely on the element's quantity,

  • and was not affected by physical or chemical changes.

  • This led her to conclude that radiation was coming from something fundamental

  • within the atoms of each element.

  • The idea was radical

  • and helped to disprove the long-standing model of atoms as indivisible objects.

  • Next, by focusing on a super radioactive ore called pitchblende,

  • the Curies realized that uranium alone couldn't be creating all the radiation.

  • So, were there other radioactive elements that might be responsible?

  • In 1898, they reported two new elements,

  • polonium, named for Marie's native Poland,

  • and radium, the Latin word for ray.

  • They also coined the term radioactivity along the way.

  • By 1902, the Curies had extracted a tenth of a gram of pure radium chloride salt

  • from several tons of pitchblende,

  • an incredible feat at the time.

  • Later that year, Pierre Curie and Henri Becquerel

  • were nominated for the Nobel Prize in physics,

  • but Marie was overlooked.

  • Pierre took a stand in support of his wife's well-earned recognition.

  • And so both of the Curies and Becquerel shared the 1903 Nobel Prize,

  • making Marie Curie the first female Nobel Laureate.

  • Well funded and well respected, the Curies were on a roll.

  • But tragedy struck in 1906 when Pierre was crushed by a horse-drawn cart

  • as he crossed a busy intersection.

  • Marie, devastated, immersed herself in her research

  • and took over Pierre's teaching position at the Sorbonne,

  • becoming the school's first female professor.

  • Her solo work was fruitful.

  • In 1911, she won yet another Nobel,

  • this time in chemistry for her earlier discovery of radium and polonium,

  • and her extraction and analysis of pure radium and its compounds.

  • This made her the first, and to this date,

  • only person to win Nobel Prizes in two different sciences.

  • Professor Curie put her discoveries to work,

  • changing the landscape of medical research and treatments.

  • She opened mobile radiology units during World War I,

  • and investigated radiation's effects on tumors.

  • However, these benefits to humanity may have come at a high personal cost.

  • Curie died in 1934 of a bone marrow disease,

  • which many today think was caused by her radiation exposure.

  • Marie Curie's revolutionary research

  • laid the groundwork for our understanding of physics and chemistry,

  • blazing trails in oncology, technology, medicine, and nuclear physics,

  • to name a few.

  • For good or ill, her discoveries in radiation launched a new era,

  • unearthing some of science's greatest secrets.

If you want a glimpse of Marie Curie's manuscripts,

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