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 –
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 –