Even from its discovery atomic research has been filled with doubt and danger where every massive breakthrough has resulted in fear its potential. The radioactive age began in 1869 when Wilhelm Roentgen discovered X-rays, being the first practical application of a radioactive invention. (Silverstein, 31) In 1898, the Curies discovered the element of Radium and from then on America would never be the same. Radium found its way into paint, candles, and eye washes. In 1938; however, Otto Hahn-a German chemist and physicist-fired neutrons at uranium atoms and succeeded in splitting an atom for the first time, this event would ultimately change the entire course of human…
* Sir Lawrence Bragg – the head of the Cavendish laboratory at Cambridge university, met with much resistance from Watson and especially Crick. Bragg is the youngest ever Nobel prize winner, which he won for the discovery of the Bragg low of X-ray crystallography. Bragg also wrote the foreword to Watson’s book, adding dramatically to the respectability of the book.…
This essay is of a woman astronomer Caroline Herschel. Herschel was the first lady to discover a comet. The reason why I chose this topic is because apart from being a women astronomer she also showed her prominence in mathematics. She hailed from a musician background but her fortune brought her to the field of astronomy and today we stand witnessing vital discoveries such as of comets, which is a very significant topic of research in this modern era. She has been recognized and honored worldwide for her work.…
Her accomplishments are seemingly never-ending. After earning her master’s degree in science and physics in only three years, Marie Curie went to achieve bigger and better things – things that most people can only dream of accomplishing. Marie was actually paid by the Society for the Encouragement of National Industry to investigate the magnetic properties of different steels. It was not too long before Marie started to notice unusual activity from uranium, which she would eventually discover to be “radiation.” After years of sleepless nights spent working in the lab, Marie, with the help of her husband, discovered that thorium and uranium gave off radioactive waves. Pierre Curie later proved that these waves could damage flesh, but could also be a way to treat cancer and other ailments. Marie, as well as her husband, went on to discover two new elements recently unknown to man, those being polonium and radium. Marie became the first woman to win a Nobel Prize for her scientific achievements, but the awards did not stop there. She later became the first person ever to win a second Nobel Prize. Although Marie Curie’s life was brought to an end by overexposure to radiation, she will forever be remembered as a driven and dedicated individual, who would not let anything get in the way of her one true passion –…
His daughter continued her father’s legacy by majoring in chemistry. Many years later, she started a Queens College scholarship fund in his honor to assist minority students majoring in chemistry or physics. She studied at Columbia university she majored in Chemistry, after that she earned her Ph.D., When Marie graduated she did nothing but studied the human body. I was proud of her because she was the first woman to go to college most women weren’t allowed at a lot of colleges. What got her in science was influenced by her father, who had attended Cornell University with intentions of becoming a chemist, but had been unable to complete his education due to a lack of funds. His daughter continued her father’s legacy by majoring in chemistry. Many years later, she started a Queens College scholarship fund in his honor to assist minority students majoring in chemistry or physics. But she had some problems trying to get in school but she solved that problem by keep trying to accomplish her dream. She started teaching at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, she continued research on arteries and the effects of cigarette smoke on the lungs in April, 1947. That was good because she affected the world because she inspires other women to get their degrees. It also inspired me…
When I was born on July 25, 1920, in London, England, I was no groundbreaking scientist. I had to start out somewhere. I went to St. Paul’s Girls School for early education. In 1938, I entered Cambridge University for a degree in Physical Chemistry. Three years later, I had completed college and started working in a lab. I…
Fröman, N. (1996, February 28). Marie and Pierre Curie and the Discovery of Polonium and Radium. Retrieved December 11, 2011, from Nobel Prize: http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/articles/curie/…
(para. 146). She makes her readers even more curious, and teases them with the ‘secret’ breakthrough. Scientific discoveries influence these types of stories, and…
* Schuyler, Tami. Scientists, Mathematicians, and Inventors: An Encyclopedia of People Who Changed the World (Lives and Legacies Series). Phoenix: Oryx Press, 1998. Print.…
Although I never met her, Marie Curie is someone who has inspired me and has had a positive impact on my life. I have always held an unyielding interest in science, but was cast aside by a number of teachers and peers. One excellent example is a ‘friend’ who would mock my interests, belittle anything remotely scientific I said, and would invent false accomplishments to try and make himself seem more superior (he actually tried to make me believe that he beat out renowned professors to get his theory of relativity published in the Canadian archives but couldn’t show it to me because it was “top secret”). Reading about Marie Curie and what she was able to accomplish, despite all the difficulties of being a woman in science in the 1800-1900s,…
Imagine a place where nobody could get water. And even the people who did often died due to contamination. People had to deal with that, until the Romans came along. The Romans solved this problem by building aqueducts along the whole city, providing clean water to everyone. The Romans pushed the boundaries of engineering, much farther than anyone before their time.…
Slavery was always a controversial issue in America. Many people saw slavery as an essential part of life in every aspect, while others saw it as immoral and an injustice to humanity. In the 1840s when Manifest Destiny started to thrive, things began to heat up. New territories meant a possibility for a new slave or free state in America. Because the new territories were allowed the right of popular sovereignty to determine whether they would have slaves or not, abolitionists and non-abolitionists were at a constant battle to gain a new state.…
As Rosalind Franklin was pursuing her degree World War II raged. She focused her research on coal, the most efficient use of energy resources. Five papers on the subject were published before Franklin¡¯s 26th birthday. Further, Franklin had given up her fellowship to become a physical chemist at the British Coal Utilization Research Association at age 22. She was indeed an efficient and driven researcher. Franklin utilized the X-ray diffraction techniques (that she has become most famous for) while working in a Paris laboratory between 1947 and 1950, with crystallographer Jacques Mering.…
Youngest of three children, Enrico Fermi was born September 29, 1901 in Rome, Italy. He was the son of Alberto Fermi and Ida de Gattis. His father was a railroad official and mother an elementary school teacher. He had an older sister, Maria, born in 1899, and an older brother, Giulio, born in 1900 [1]. He married Laura Copon on July 18, 1928 and had one daughter, Nella, born January 31, 1931, and one son, Giulio, born February 16, 1936 [1].…
•Biography of some scientist, key inventions and how he/she changed the face of the world…