Jafar

Nour Jafar

Ms. Elsen

Chemistry 10 Block H

May 18, 2010

Marie Curie: Radioactivity and X rays

Marie Curie was born Marie Sklodowska on November 7th, 1867. She was born in Warsaw, Poland (“Marie Curie – Biography” par 1). Curie received her education from local schools; but her knowledge of science from her father. She obtained “Licentiateships in Physics and the Mathematical Sciences” from Sorbonne University, in Paris (“Marie Curie – Biography” par 1). Curie also received her Doctor of Science degree at Sorbonne as well. Marie Curie married Professor Pierre Curie after meeting him during university. The two wed within the year that they met. (“Marie Curie – Biography” par 1).

        Marie Curie, with the help of her husband Pierre Curie, and with past discoveries of Antoine Becquerel, discovered radioactivity, which explained the creation of the x ray. It first started off with Antoine Becquerel, a French physicist. “Becquerel was familiar with the work of Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen,” which were the photographs that Roentgen had taken (Peters and Slowiczek par 3). These photographs were unique in their kind. One of the photographs that were taken was one of his wife’s hands, complete with her ring. This photo showed the skeletal structure of her hand, and the ring that was placed on top (Peters and Slowiczek par 4). Roentgen’s wife placed her hand in the path of x rays, which Roentgen created himself. He created x rays “by beaming an electron ray energy source onto a cathode tube.” (Peters and Slowiczek par 4). These “photographs” intrigued Becquerel, inducing him to research the phenomena of florescence and phosphorescence. In March of 1896, he discovered that florescence and phosphorescence were similar to each other; as well as to x rays, but there is also an important difference. The difference between the three was florescence and x rays stopped, when the starting energy force was halted; but the phosphorescence continued (Peters and Slowiczek par 5).        

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A similarity between the three was the energy was initially derived from an outside source (Peters and Slowiczek par 5). Becquerel tried to harness the sun’s energy; making it the initial source of energy for the different rays, but that was not possible.                         Source: National Health Museum

He put his wrapped photographic plates away in a darkened drawer, along with some crystals containing uranium. Much to his Becquerel's surprise, the plates were exposed during storage by invisible emanations from the uranium. The emanations did not require the presence of an initiating energy source--the crystals emitted rays on their own! ...

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