Showing posts with label Curie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Curie. Show all posts

November 7 - Happy Birthday, Marie Curie and Lise Meitner

 Posted on November 7, 2021


This is an update of my post published on November 7, 2010:




Two different eminent female scientists who did important pioneering work in the field of radioactivity were born on this day. Curie was born Maria Skłodowska in 1867, in Warsaw, Poland (at the time Warsaw was part of the Russian empire); most of her adult life and work were in France. Meitner was born in Austria in 1878, and (because she was Jewish) she later had to flee from the Nazis and ended up in Sweden.


Curie and her husband Pierre did experiments on uranium minerals and discovered two new elements, polonium and radium. Curie won two different Nobel prizes for her work (in Physics and Chemistry)—the first person in the world ever to win two, and still the only woman to win in two different fields. She coined the word radioactivity, invented techniques for isolating radioactive isotopes, and even did the world's first studies on radiation treatment of cancer. Sadly, she died from radiation poisoning.

The chemical element curium (atomic number 96) is named for Marie and Pierre Curie.
Radioactive decay

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Meitner and her colleague Otto Hahn discovered nuclear fission. Although Hahn received a Nobel prize for the discovery, Meitner was overlooked—an omission that many people think is terrible. Meitner and Hahn's work explained why fission released energy, exactly how uranium breaks down into lighter elements, and why no stable elements heavier than uranium exist in nature.

The element meitnerium (atomic number 109) is named for Meitner.
Fission is one of the things that are used in nuclear power
and nuclear weapons.



Learn about nuclear physics!

Atoms are basically made up of heavy particles called protons and neutrons, which are found in the center (or nucleus) of the atom, and a surrounding cloud of teensy, almost weightless particles called electrons. A particular element is defined as having a certain atomic number, which is the number of protons that element has.


Lithium is atomic number 3.
It has 3 protons,
and it usually has 4 neutrons
and 3 electrons.

Note that this is a diagram meant
to give information - it is not what
an atom "looks like."

If an atom of a particular element loses or gains an electron or two, it is called an ion.
Lithium is quite prone to losing an electron.
Note that, in this diagram, the protons and 
neutrons are not visible - they are represented
as a single spherical nucleus.


If an atom of a particular element has more or fewer neutrons than usual, it is called an isotope.


There are two naturally occurring isotopes of
lithium. Much more common is the lithium that
has 3 protons and 4 neutrons - each of which
are considered to weigh 1 in atomic weight; so
the most common lithium has an atomic weight of
roughly 7. Some lithium, however, has 3 protons
and only 3 neutrons; its atomic weight is
roughly 6. These isotopes of lithium are called
lithium 7 and lithium 6.

But if an atom of a particular element loses or gains a proton—it becomes another element!
If lithium were to somehow lose a proton, it would become
helium (which has 2 protons), above.

If lithium were to somehow gain a proton, it would become
beryllium (which has 4 protons), below.



  • Check out this wall chart. Click on sections to see the details and read the text!  Then use the online teacher's guide to the wall chart to find out more. 





 


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October 19 – Happy Birthday, Marguerite Perey!

Posted October 19, 2020


Today's famous birthday was a French physicist, a student of Marie Curie, and the first woman elected to the French Académie des Sciences. 

(If you can believe it, Curie never was!!!)

One of Perey's biggest accomplishments was discovering the element francium. You may have guessed that the name, francium, was chosen because the element was discovered in France.
 



Francium (symbol Fr, atomic number 87) is really unstable, highly radioactive. Its half-life is just 22 minutes. That means that it only takes 22 minutes for half of a clump of pure francium to break down into astatine, radium, and/or radon (depending on the isotope - the number of neutrons - in the francium).


September 12 – Happy Birthday, Irene Joliot-Curie

Posted on September 12, 2014

Like mother, like daughter:
Irene (standing) and Marie Curie
Did you know that Marie and Pierre Curie, famous for winning Nobel Prizes for their pioneering work in radioactivity, had a daughter—who also won a Nobel Prize for her work in radioactivity?!

Irene Curie was born on this date in 1897, in Paris. She started her formal education at age 10, but her parents soon decided that she needed a more challenging environment than the traditional school. So Irene's mother, Marie Curie, created what we today might call a homeschooling co-op. She enlisted the help of a number of eminent French scholars who also had children, and each parent took a turn educating all of the children in his or her own home. As you might imagine, with the Curies and another physicist, Paul Langevin, being part of “The Cooperative,” scientific principles and methodologies were part of the curriculum, but a variety of topics were explored in this co-op, including Chinese and sculpture. Apparently there was a lot of emphasis on self-expression, and a lot of time for play.

Like her parents, Irene went into physics. 

Like her parents, she married another scientist, and they each took on the other's last name, becoming Irene Joliot-Curie and Frederic Joliet-Curie. 

Like Irene's parents, the Joliot-Curies worked with radioactivity.

And like her parents, the two won a Nobel Prize for their work!

They were the first to discover how to create artificial radioactivity and how to turn one element into another. The Joliet-Curies created radioactive nitrogen from boron. Later they created radioactive phosphorous from aluminum, and radioactive silicon from magnesium.

Radioactive atoms emit (give off)
either particles or energy.

Unfortunately, also like her mother, Joliet-Curie died from working so long with dangerous radioactive materials.

Also on this date:



United Nations Day for South-South Cooperation





Anniversary of JFK's “space speech” and other space stuff











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December 26 – Marie and Pierre Curie Announce a Discovery

Posted December 26, 2013

For scientists, there is often a rush to publish findings before someone else does—a rush to announce a discovery, just in case someone else is working in the same area and about to discover the same thing!

On this date in 1898, Marie and Curie announced that (a mere five days earlier) they had isolated from a complex mineral called pitchblende an “active” element that they named radium.



What I mean by “active” is that pitchblende gives off radiation similar to X-rays. Two years earlier another scientist had discovered that uranium gives off such radiation, and uranium is definitely present in pitchblende. But the radiation from pitchblende is four times stronger than the radiation from uranium itself, Marie found, so she was certain that another, much more active element could also be found in the mineral.

And she was right! But it took quite a bit of time and labor to prove it and to isolate the tiny amounts of radium in the mineral. From a ton of pitchblende, only one-tenth of a gram (around 2/10,000ths of a pound) of radium could be collected!

Pitchblende
Learn more about radioactivity here

Learn more about radium here

Learn more about Marie Curie here. I must mention here that Curie is the first woman to win a Nobel prize, the only woman to win in two fields, and the only person to win in two different sciences (physics and chemistry)!


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