Marie Curie
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c. 1920
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Born |
Maria Salomea Skłodowska
7 November 1867 |
Died | 4 July 1934 (aged 66)
Passy, Haute-Savoie, France
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Cause of death | Aplastic anemia from exposure to radiation |
Residence | Poland, France |
Citizenship |
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Alma mater |
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Known for | |
Spouse(s) | Pierre Curie (1859–1906; m. 1895) |
Children |
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Awards |
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Scientific career | |
Fields | Physics, chemistry |
Institutions | |
Thesis | Recherches sur les substances radioactives (Research on Radioactive Substances) |
Doctoral advisor | Gabriel Lippmann |
Doctoral students | |
Signature | |
Notes | |
She is the only person to win a Nobel Prize in two different sciences.
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Marie Skłodowska Curie was a Polish and naturalized-French physicist and chemist who conducted pioneering research on radioactivity. She was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, the first person and only woman to win twice, and the only person to win a Nobel Prize in two different sciences. She was part of the Curie family legacy of five Nobel Prizes. She was also the first woman to become a professor at the University of Paris, and in 1995 became the first woman to be entombed on her own merits in the Panthéon in Paris.
She was born in Warsaw, in what was then the Kingdom of Poland, part of the Russian Empire. She studied at Warsaw's clandestine Flying University and began her practical scientific training in Warsaw. In 1891, aged 24, she followed her older sister Bronisława to study in Paris, where she earned her higher degrees and conducted her subsequent scientific work. She shared the 1903 Nobel Prize in Physics with her husband Pierre Curie and physicist Henri Becquerel. She won the 1911 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
Her achievements included the development of the theory of radioactivity (a term that she coined), techniques for isolating radioactive isotopes, and the discovery of two elements, polonium and radium. Under her direction, the world's first studies into the treatment of neoplasms were conducted using radioactive isotopes. She founded the Curie Institutes in Paris and in Warsaw, which remain major centers of medical research today. During World War I she developed mobile radiography units to provide X-ray services to field hospitals.
While a French citizen, Marie Skłodowska Curie, who used both surnames, never lost her sense of Polish identity. She taught her daughters the Polish language and took them on visits to Poland. She named the first chemical element she discovered polonium, after her native country.
Marie Curie died in 1934, aged 66, at a sanatorium in Sancellemoz (Haute-Savoie), France, of aplastic anemia from exposure to radiation in the course of her scientific research and in the course of her radiological work at field hospitals during World War I.
Life
Early years
Maria Skłodowska was born in Warsaw, in Congress Poland in the Russian Empire, on 7 November 1867, the fifth and youngest child of well-known teachers Bronisława, née Boguska, and Władysław Skłodowski. The elder siblings of Maria (nicknamed Mania) were Zofia (born 1862, nicknamed Zosia), Józef (born 1863, nicknamed Józio), Bronisława (born 1865, nicknamed Bronia) and Helena (born 1866, nicknamed Hela).
On both the paternal and maternal sides, the family had lost
their property and fortunes through patriotic involvements in Polish
national uprisings aimed at restoring Poland's independence (the most
recent had been the January Uprising of 1863–65). This condemned the subsequent generation, including Maria and her elder siblings, to a difficult struggle to get ahead in life. Maria's paternal grandfather, Józef Skłodowski, had been a respected teacher in Lublin, where he taught the young Bolesław Prus, who would become a leading figure in Polish literature.
Władysław Skłodowski taught mathematics and physics, subjects that Maria was to pursue, and was also director of two Warsaw gymnasia
for boys. After Russian authorities eliminated laboratory instruction
from the Polish schools, he brought much of the laboratory equipment
home, and instructed his children in its use.
He was eventually fired by his Russian supervisors for pro-Polish
sentiments, and forced to take lower-paying posts; the family also lost
money on a bad investment, and eventually chose to supplement their
income by lodging boys in the house.
Maria's mother Bronisława operated a prestigious Warsaw boarding school
for girls; she resigned from the position after Maria was born. She died of tuberculosis in May 1878, when Maria was ten years old. Less than three years earlier, Maria's oldest sibling, Zofia, had died of typhus contracted from a boarder. Maria's father was an atheist; her mother a devout Catholic. The deaths of Maria's mother and sister caused her to give up Catholicism and become agnostic.
When she was ten years old, Maria began attending the boarding school of J. Sikorska; next she attended a gymnasium for girls, from which she graduated on 12 June 1883 with a gold medal. After a collapse, possibly due to depression,
she spent the following year in the countryside with relatives of her
father, and the next year with her father in Warsaw, where she did some
tutoring.
Unable to enroll in a regular institution of higher education because
she was a woman, she and her sister Bronisława became involved with the
clandestine Flying University (sometimes translated as Floating University), a Polish patriotic institution of higher learning that admitted women students.
Maria made an agreement with her sister, Bronisława, that she would
give her financial assistance during Bronisława's medical studies in
Paris, in exchange for similar assistance two years later. In connection with this, Maria took a position as governess: first as a home tutor in Warsaw; then for two years as a governess in Szczuki with a landed family, the Żorawskis, who were relatives of her father. While working for the latter family, she fell in love with their son, Kazimierz Żorawski, a future eminent mathematician. His parents rejected the idea of his marrying the penniless relative, and Kazimierz was unable to oppose them.
Maria's loss of the relationship with Żorawski was tragic for both. He
soon earned a doctorate and pursued an academic career as a
mathematician, becoming a professor and rector of Kraków University. Still, as an old man and a mathematics professor at the Warsaw Polytechnic, he would sit contemplatively before the statue of Maria Skłodowska which had been erected in 1935 before the Radium Institute that she had founded in 1932.
At the beginning of 1890, Bronisława—who a few months earlier had married Kazimierz Dłuski,
a Polish physician and social and political activist—invited Maria to
join them in Paris. Maria declined because she could not afford the
university tuition; it would take her a year and a half longer to gather
the necessary funds. She was helped by her father, who was able to secure a more lucrative position again. All that time she continued to educate herself, reading books, exchanging letters, and being tutored herself. In early 1889 she returned home to her father in Warsaw. She continued working as a governess, and remained there till late 1891.
She tutored, studied at the Flying University, and began her practical
scientific training (1890–91) in a chemical laboratory at the Museum of Industry and Agriculture at Krakowskie Przedmieście 66, near Warsaw's Old Town. The laboratory was run by her cousin Józef Boguski, who had been an assistant in Saint Petersburg to the Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev.
New life in Paris
In late 1891, she left Poland for France.
In Paris, Maria (or Marie, as she would be known in France) briefly
found shelter with her sister and brother-in-law before renting a garret closer to the university, in the Latin Quarter, and proceeding with her studies of physics, chemistry, and mathematics at the University of Paris, where she enrolled in late 1891.
She subsisted on her meager resources, keeping herself warm during
cold winters by wearing all the clothes she had. She focused so hard on
her studies that she sometimes forgot to eat.
Skłodowska studied during the day and tutored evenings, barely
earning her keep. In 1893, she was awarded a degree in physics and began
work in an industrial laboratory of Professor Gabriel Lippmann.
Meanwhile, she continued studying at the University of Paris, and with
the aid of a fellowship she was able to earn a second degree in 1894.
Skłodowska had begun her scientific career in Paris with an
investigation of the magnetic properties of various steels, commissioned
by the Society for the Encouragement of National Industry (Société d'encouragement pour l'industrie nationale). That same year Pierre Curie entered her life; it was their mutual interest in natural sciences that drew them together. Pierre Curie was an instructor at the School of Physics and Chemistry, the École supérieure de physique et de chimie industrielles de la ville de Paris (ESPCI). They were introduced by the Polish physicist, Professor Józef Wierusz-Kowalski,
who had learned that she was looking for a larger laboratory space,
something that Wierusz-Kowalski thought Pierre Curie had access to. Though Curie did not have a large laboratory, he was able to find some space for Skłodowska where she was able to begin work.
Their mutual passion for science brought them increasingly closer, and they began to develop feelings for one another.
Eventually Pierre Curie proposed marriage, but at first Skłodowska did
not accept as she was still planning to go back to her native country.
Curie, however, declared that he was ready to move with her to Poland,
even if it meant being reduced to teaching French. Meanwhile, for the 1894 summer break, Skłodowska returned to Warsaw, where she visited her family.
She was still laboring under the illusion that she would be able to
work in her chosen field in Poland, but she was denied a place at Kraków University because she was a woman. A letter from Pierre Curie convinced her to return to Paris to pursue a Ph.D. At Skłodowska's insistence, Curie had written up his research on magnetism and received his own doctorate in March 1895; he was also promoted to professor at the School. A contemporary quip would call Skłodowska "Pierre's biggest discovery." On 26 July 1895 they were married in Sceaux (Seine); neither wanted a religious service. Curie's dark blue outfit, worn instead of a bridal gown, would serve her for many years as a laboratory outfit.
They shared two pastimes: long bicycle trips, and journeys abroad,
which brought them even closer. In Pierre, Marie had found a new love, a
partner, and a scientific collaborator on whom she could depend.
New elements
In 1895, Wilhelm Roentgen discovered the existence of X-rays, though the mechanism behind their production was not yet understood. In 1896, Henri Becquerel discovered that uranium salts emitted rays that resembled X-rays in their penetrating power. He demonstrated that this radiation, unlike phosphorescence,
did not depend on an external source of energy but seemed to arise
spontaneously from uranium itself. Influenced by these two important
discoveries, Curie decided to look into uranium rays as a possible field
of research for a thesis.
She used an innovative technique to investigate samples. Fifteen
years earlier, her husband and his brother had developed a version of
the electrometer, a sensitive device for measuring electric charge.
Using her husband's electrometer, she discovered that uranium rays
caused the air around a sample to conduct electricity. Using this
technique, her first result was the finding that the activity of the
uranium compounds depended only on the quantity of uranium present. She hypothesized that the radiation was not the outcome of some interaction of molecules but must come from the atom itself. This hypothesis was an important step in disproving the assumption that atoms were indivisible.
In 1897, her daughter Irène was born. To support her family, Curie began teaching at the École Normale Supérieure.
The Curies did not have a dedicated laboratory; most of their research
was carried out in a converted shed next to the School of Physics and
Chemistry. The shed, formerly a medical school dissecting room, was poorly ventilated and not even waterproof. They were unaware of the deleterious effects of radiation exposure
attendant on their continued unprotected work with radioactive
substances. The School did not sponsor her research, but she would
receive subsidies from metallurgical and mining companies and from
various organizations and governments.
Curie's systematic studies included two uranium minerals, pitchblende and torbernite (also known as chalcolite).
Her electrometer showed that pitchblende was four times as active as
uranium itself, and chalcolite twice as active. She concluded that, if
her earlier results relating the quantity of uranium to its activity
were correct, then these two minerals must contain small quantities of
another substance that was far more active than uranium. She began a systematic search for additional substances that emit radiation, and by 1898 she discovered that the element thorium was also radioactive.
Pierre Curie was increasingly intrigued by her work. By mid-1898 he was
so invested in it that he decided to drop his work on crystals and to
join her.
The [research] idea [writes Reid] was her own; no one helped her formulate it, and although she took it to her husband for his opinion she clearly established her ownership of it. She later recorded the fact twice in her biography of her husband to ensure there was no chance whatever of any ambiguity. It [is] likely that already at this early stage of her career [she] realized that... many scientists would find it difficult to believe that a woman could be capable of the original work in which she was involved.
She was acutely aware of the importance of promptly publishing her discoveries and thus establishing her priority. Had not Becquerel, two years earlier, presented his discovery to the Académie des Sciences the day after he made it, credit for the discovery of radioactivity, and even a Nobel Prize, would instead have gone to Silvanus Thompson.
Curie chose the same rapid means of publication. Her paper, giving a
brief and simple account of her work, was presented for her to the Académie on 12 April 1898 by her former professor, Gabriel Lippmann.
Even so, just as Thompson had been beaten by Becquerel, so Curie was
beaten in the race to tell of her discovery that thorium gives off rays
in the same way as uranium; two months earlier, Gerhard Carl Schmidt had published his own finding in Berlin.
At that time, no one else in the world of physics had noticed
what Curie recorded in a sentence of her paper, describing how much
greater were the activities of pitchblende and chalcolite than uranium
itself: "The fact is very remarkable, and leads to the belief that these
minerals may contain an element which is much more active than
uranium." She later would recall how she felt "a passionate desire to
verify this hypothesis as rapidly as possible."
On 14 April 1898, the Curies optimistically weighed out a 100-gram
sample of pitchblende and ground it with a pestle and mortar. They did
not realize at the time that what they were searching for was present in
such minute quantities that they would eventually have to process tons
of the ore.
In July 1898, Curie and her husband published a joint paper announcing the existence of an element which they named "polonium", in honor of her native Poland, which would for another twenty years remain partitioned among three empires (Russian, Austrian, and Prussian). On 26 December 1898, the Curies announced the existence of a second element, which they named "radium", from the Latin word for "ray". In the course of their research, they also coined the word "radioactivity".
To prove their discoveries beyond any doubt, the Curies sought to isolate polonium and radium in pure form.
Pitchblende is a complex mineral; the chemical separation of its
constituents was an arduous task. The discovery of polonium had been
relatively easy; chemically it resembles the element bismuth, and polonium was the only bismuth-like substance in the ore. Radium, however, was more elusive; it is closely related chemically to barium,
and pitchblende contains both elements. By 1898 the Curies had obtained
traces of radium, but appreciable quantities, uncontaminated with
barium, were still beyond reach. The Curies undertook the arduous task of separating out radium salt by differential crystallization. From a ton of pitchblende, one-tenth of a gram of radium chloride was separated in 1902. In 1910, she isolated pure radium metal. She never succeeded in isolating polonium, which has a half-life of only 138 days.
Between 1898 and 1902, the Curies published, jointly or
separately, a total of 32 scientific papers, including one that
announced that, when exposed to radium, diseased, tumor-forming cells were destroyed faster than healthy cells.
In 1900, Curie became the first woman faculty member at the École
Normale Supérieure, and her husband joined the faculty of the University
of Paris. In 1902 she visited Poland on the occasion of her father's death.
In June 1903, supervised by Gabriel Lippmann, Curie was awarded her doctorate from the University of Paris. That month the couple were invited to the Royal Institution
in London to give a speech on radioactivity; being a woman, she was
prevented from speaking, and Pierre Curie alone was allowed to. Meanwhile, a new industry began developing, based on radium. The Curies did not patent their discovery and benefited little from this increasingly profitable business.
Nobel Prizes
In December 1903, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded Pierre Curie, Marie Curie, and Henri Becquerel the Nobel Prize in Physics, "in recognition of the extraordinary services they have rendered by their joint researches on the radiation phenomena discovered by Professor Henri Becquerel."
At first the committee had intended to honor only Pierre Curie and
Henri Becquerel, but a committee member and advocate for women
scientists, Swedish mathematician Magnus Goesta Mittag-Leffler, alerted Pierre to the situation, and after his complaint, Marie's name was added to the nomination. Marie Curie was the first woman to be awarded a Nobel Prize.
Curie and her husband declined to go to Stockholm
to receive the prize in person; they were too busy with their work, and
Pierre Curie, who disliked public ceremonies, was feeling increasingly
ill. As Nobel laureates were required to deliver a lecture, the Curies finally undertook the trip in 1905. The award money allowed the Curies to hire their first laboratory assistant. Following the award of the Nobel Prize, and galvanized by an offer from the University of Geneva,
which offered Pierre Curie a position, the University of Paris gave him
a professorship and the chair of physics, although the Curies still did
not have a proper laboratory.
Upon Pierre Curie's complaint, the University of Paris relented and
agreed to furnish a new laboratory, but it would not be ready until
1906.
In December 1904, Curie gave birth to their second daughter, Ève. She hired Polish governesses to teach her daughters her native language, and sent or took them on visits to Poland.
On 19 April 1906, Pierre Curie was killed in a road accident. Walking across the Rue Dauphine in heavy rain, he was struck by a horse-drawn vehicle and fell under its wheels, causing his skull to fracture. Curie was devastated by her husband's death.
On 13 May 1906 the physics department of the University of Paris
decided to retain the chair that had been created for her late husband
and to offer it to Marie. She accepted it, hoping to create a
world-class laboratory as a tribute to her husband Pierre. She was the first woman to become a professor at the University of Paris.
Curie's quest to create a new laboratory did not end with the
University of Paris, however. In her later years, she headed the Radium
Institute (Institut du radium, now Curie Institute, Institut Curie), a radioactivity laboratory created for her by the Pasteur Institute and the University of Paris. The initiative for creating the Radium Institute had come in 1909 from Pierre Paul Émile Roux,
director of the Pasteur Institute, who had been disappointed that the
University of Paris was not giving Curie a proper laboratory and had
suggested that she move to the Pasteur Institute.
Only then, with the threat of Curie leaving, did the University of
Paris relent, and eventually the Curie Pavilion became a joint
initiative of the University of Paris and the Pasteur Institute.
In 1910 Curie succeeded in isolating radium; she also defined an
international standard for radioactive emissions that was eventually
named for her and Pierre: the curie. Nevertheless, in 1911 the French Academy of Sciences failed, by one or two votes, to elect her to membership in the Academy. Elected instead was Édouard Branly, an inventor who had helped Guglielmo Marconi develop the wireless telegraph. It was only over half a century later, in 1962, that a doctoral student of Curie's, Marguerite Perey, became the first woman elected to membership in the Academy.
Despite Curie's fame as a scientist working for France, the public's attitude tended toward xenophobia—the same that had led to the Dreyfus affair—which also fueled false speculation that Curie was Jewish. During the French Academy of Sciences elections, she was vilified by the right-wing press as a foreigner and atheist.
Her daughter later remarked on the French press' hypocrisy in
portraying Curie as an unworthy foreigner when she was nominated for a
French honor, but portraying her as a French heroine when she received
foreign honors such as her Nobel Prizes.
In 1911 it was revealed that in 1910-11 Curie had conducted an affair of about a year's duration with physicist Paul Langevin, a former student of Pierre Curie's, a married man who was estranged from his wife.
This resulted in a press scandal that was exploited by her academic
opponents. Curie (then in her mid-40s) was five years older than
Langevin and was misrepresented in the tabloids as a foreign Jewish
home-wrecker.
When the scandal broke, she was away at a conference in Belgium; on her
return, she found an angry mob in front of her house and had to seek
refuge, with her daughters, in the home of her friend, Camille Marbo.
International recognition for her work had been growing to new
heights, and the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, overcoming
opposition prompted by the Langevin scandal, honored her a second time,
with the 1911 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
This award was "in recognition of her services to the advancement of
chemistry by the discovery of the elements radium and polonium, by the
isolation of radium and the study of the nature and compounds of this
remarkable element." She was the first person to win or share two Nobel Prizes, and remains alone with Linus Pauling as Nobel laureates in two fields each. A delegation of celebrated Polish men of learning, headed by novelist Henryk Sienkiewicz, encouraged her to return to Poland and continue her research in her native country.
Curie's second Nobel Prize enabled her to persuade the French
government into supporting the Radium Institute, built in 1914, where
research was conducted in chemistry, physics, and medicine.
A month after accepting her 1911 Nobel Prize, she was hospitalized with
depression and a kidney ailment. For most of 1912 she avoided public
life but did spend time in England with her friend and fellow physicist,
Hertha Ayrton. She returned to her laboratory only in December, after a break of about 14 months.
In 1912, the Warsaw Scientific Society
offered her the directorship of a new laboratory in Warsaw but she
declined, focusing on the developing Radium Institute to be completed in
August 1914, and on a new street named Rue Pierre-Curie. She was appointed Director of the Curie Laboratory in the Radium Institute of the University of Paris, founded in 1914.
She visited Poland in 1913 and was welcomed in Warsaw but the visit was
mostly ignored by the Russian authorities. The Institute's development
was interrupted by the coming war, as most researchers were drafted into
the French Army, and it fully resumed its activities in 1919.
World War I
During World War I, Curie recognized that wounded soldiers were best served if operated upon as soon as possible. She saw a need for field radiological centers near the front lines to assist battlefield surgeons.
After a quick study of radiology, anatomy, and automotive mechanics she
procured X-ray equipment, vehicles, auxiliary generators, and developed
mobile radiography units, which came to be popularly known as petites Curies ("Little Curies"). She became the director of the Red Cross Radiology Service and set up France's first military radiology centre, operational by late 1914. Assisted at first by a military doctor and by her 17-year-old daughter Irène,
Curie directed the installation of 20 mobile radiological vehicles and
another 200 radiological units at field hospitals in the first year of
the war. Later, she began training other women as aides.
In 1915, Curie produced hollow needles containing "radium
emanation", a colorless, radioactive gas given off by radium, later
identified as radon, to be used for sterilizing infected tissue. She provided the radium from her own one-gram supply. It is estimated that over a million wounded soldiers were treated with her X-ray units. Busy with this work, she carried out very little scientific research during that period.
In spite of all her humanitarian contributions to the French war
effort, Curie never received any formal recognition of it from the
French government.
Also, promptly after the war started, she attempted to donate her gold Nobel Prize medals to the war effort but the French National Bank refused to accept them. She did buy war bonds, using her Nobel Prize money. She said:
I am going to give up the little gold I possess. I shall add to this the scientific medals, which are quite useless to me. There is something else: by sheer laziness I had allowed the money for my second Nobel Prize to remain in Stockholm in Swedish crowns. This is the chief part of what we possess. I should like to bring it back here and invest it in war loans. The state needs it. Only, I have no illusions: this money will probably be lost.
She was also an active member in committees of Polonia in France dedicated to the Polish cause. After the war, she summarized her wartime experiences in a book, Radiology in War (1919).
Postwar years
In 1920, for the 25th anniversary of the discovery of radium, the
French government established a stipend for her; its previous recipient
was Louis Pasteur (1822–95). In 1921, she was welcomed triumphantly when she toured the United States to raise funds for research on radium. Mrs. William Brown Meloney, after interviewing Curie, created a Marie Curie Radium Fund and raised money to buy radium, publicizing her trip.
In 1921, U.S. President Warren G. Harding received her at the White House to present her with the 1 gram of radium collected in the United States.
Before the meeting, recognizing her growing fame abroad, and
embarrassed by the fact that she had no French official distinctions to
wear in public, the French government offered her a Legion of Honour award, but she refused. In 1922 she became a fellow of the French Academy of Medicine. She also traveled to other countries, appearing publicly and giving lectures in Belgium, Brazil, Spain, and Czechoslovakia.
Led by Curie, the Institute produced four more Nobel Prize winners, including her daughter Irène Joliot-Curie and her son-in-law, Frédéric Joliot-Curie. Eventually it became one of the world's four major radioactivity-research laboratories, the others being the Cavendish Laboratory, with Ernest Rutherford; the Institute for Radium Research, Vienna, with Stefan Meyer; and the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Chemistry, with Otto Hahn and Lise Meitner.
In August 1922 Marie Curie became a member of the League of Nations' newly created International Committee on Intellectual Cooperation.
She sat on the Committee until 1934 and contributed to League of
Nations scientific coordination with other prominent researchers such as
Albert Einstein, Hendrik Lorentz, and Henri Bergson. In 1923 she wrote a biography of her late husband, titled Pierre Curie. In 1925 she visited Poland to participate in a ceremony laying the foundations for Warsaw's Radium Institute.
Her second American tour, in 1929, succeeded in equipping the Warsaw
Radium Institute with radium; the Institute opened in 1932, with her
sister Bronisława its director.
These distractions from her scientific labours, and the attendant
publicity, caused her much discomfort but provided resources for her
work. In 1930 she was elected to the International Atomic Weights Committee, on which she served until her death.
Death
Curie visited Poland for the last time in early 1934. A few months later, on 4 July 1934, she died at the Sancellemoz sanatorium in Passy, Haute-Savoie, from aplastic anemia believed to have been contracted from her long-term exposure to radiation.
The damaging effects of ionising radiation were not known at the
time of her work, which had been carried out without the safety measures
later developed. She had carried test tubes containing radioactive isotopes in her pocket, and she stored them in her desk drawer, remarking on the faint light that the substances gave off in the dark. Curie was also exposed to X-rays from unshielded equipment while serving as a radiologist in field hospitals during the war. Although her many decades of exposure to radiation caused chronic illnesses (including near-blindness due to cataracts) and ultimately her death, she never really acknowledged the health risks of radiation exposure.
She was interred at the cemetery in Sceaux, alongside her husband Pierre. Sixty years later, in 1995, in honour of their achievements, the remains of both were transferred to the Panthéon, Paris. She became the first woman to be honoured with interment in the Panthéon on her own merits. In 2015, two other women were also interred on their own merits.
Because of their levels of radioactive contamination, her papers from the 1890s are considered too dangerous to handle. Even her cookbook is highly radioactive. Her papers are kept in lead-lined boxes, and those who wish to consult them must wear protective clothing. In her last year, she worked on a book, Radioactivity, which was published posthumously in 1935.
Legacy
The physical and societal aspects of the Curies' work contributed to
shaping the world of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Cornell University professor L. Pearce Williams observes:
The result of the Curies' work was epoch-making. Radium's radioactivity was so great that it could not be ignored. It seemed to contradict the principle of the conservation of energy and therefore forced a reconsideration of the foundations of physics. On the experimental level the discovery of radium provided men like Ernest Rutherford with sources of radioactivity with which they could probe the structure of the atom. As a result of Rutherford's experiments with alpha radiation, the nuclear atom was first postulated. In medicine, the radioactivity of radium appeared to offer a means by which cancer could be successfully attacked.
If Curie's work helped overturn established ideas in physics and
chemistry, it has had an equally profound effect in the societal sphere.
To attain her scientific achievements, she had to overcome barriers, in
both her native and her adoptive country, that were placed in her way
because she was a woman. This aspect of her life and career is
highlighted in Françoise Giroud's Marie Curie: A Life, which emphasizes Curie's role as a feminist precursor.
She was known for her honesty and moderate lifestyle. Having received a small scholarship in 1893, she returned it in 1897 as soon as she began earning her keep. She gave much of her first Nobel Prize money to friends, family, students, and research associates.
In an unusual decision, Curie intentionally refrained from patenting
the radium-isolation process, so that the scientific community could do
research unhindered. She insisted that monetary gifts and awards be given to the scientific institutions she was affiliated with rather than to her. She and her husband often refused awards and medals. Albert Einstein reportedly remarked that she was probably the only person who could not be corrupted by fame.
Awards, honors, and tributes
As one of the most famous women scientists to date, Marie Curie has
become an icon in the scientific world and has received tributes from
across the globe, even in the realm of pop culture. In a 2009 poll carried out by New Scientist,
she was voted the "most inspirational woman in science". Curie received
25.1 per cent of all votes cast, nearly twice as many as second-place Rosalind Franklin (14.2 per cent).
Poland and France declared 2011 the Year of Marie Curie, and the United Nations declared that this would be the International Year of Chemistry. An artistic installation celebrating "Madame Curie" filled the Jacobs Gallery at San Diego's Museum of Contemporary Art. On 7 November, Google celebrated the anniversary of her birth with a special Google Doodle. On 10 December, the New York Academy of Sciences celebrated the centenary of Marie Curie's second Nobel Prize in the presence of Princess Madeleine of Sweden.
Marie Curie was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, the first
person to win two Nobel Prizes, the only woman to win in two fields, and
the only person to win in multiple sciences. Awards that she received include:
- Nobel Prize in Physics (1903, with her husband Pierre Curie and Henri Becquerel)
- Davy Medal (1903, with Pierre)
- Matteucci Medal (1904, with Pierre)
- Actonian Prize (1907)
- Elliott Cresson Medal (1909)
- Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1911)
- Franklin Medal of the American Philosophical Society (1921)
Marie Curie's 1898 publication with her husband and their collaborator Gustave Bémont
for their discovery of radium and polonium was honored by a Citation
for Chemical Breakthrough Award from the Division of History of
Chemistry of the American Chemical Society presented to the ESPCI Paris
(Ecole supérieure de physique et de chimie industrielles de la Ville de
Paris) in 2015.
In 1995, she became the first woman to be entombed on her own merits in the Panthéon, Paris. The curie (symbol Ci),
a unit of radioactivity, is named in honour of her and Pierre Curie
(although the commission which agreed on the name never clearly stated
whether the standard was named after Pierre, Marie or both of them). The element with atomic number 96 was named curium. Three radioactive minerals are also named after the Curies: curite, sklodowskite, and cuprosklodowskite. She received numerous honorary degrees from universities across the world. The Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions fellowship program of the European Union for young scientists wishing to work in a foreign country is named after her. In Poland, she had received honorary doctorates from the Lwów Polytechnic (1912), Poznań University (1922), Kraków's Jagiellonian University (1924), and the Warsaw Polytechnic (1926). In 1921, in the U.S., she was awarded membership in the Iota Sigma Pi women scientists' society.
Her name is included on the Monument to the X-ray and Radium Martyrs of All Nations, erected in Hamburg, Germany in 1936.
Numerous locations around the world are named after her. In 2007, a metro station in Paris was renamed to honor both of the Curies. Polish nuclear research reactor Maria is named after her. The 7000 Curie asteroid is also named after her. A KLM McDonnell Douglas MD-11 (registration PH-KCC) is named in her honor.
Several institutions bear her name, starting with the two Curie institutes: the Maria Skłodowska–Curie Institute of Oncology, in Warsaw and the Institut Curie in Paris. She is the patron of Maria Curie-Skłodowska University, in Lublin, founded in 1944; and of Pierre and Marie Curie University (Paris VI), France's pre-eminent science university. In Britain, Marie Curie Cancer Care was organized in 1948 to care for the terminally ill.
Two museums are devoted to Marie Curie. In 1967, the Maria Skłodowska-Curie Museum was established in Warsaw's "New Town", at her birthplace on ulica Freta (Freta Street). Her Paris laboratory is preserved as the Musée Curie, open since 1992.
Several works of art bear her likeness. In 1935, Michalina Mościcka, wife of Polish President Ignacy Mościcki, unveiled a statue of Marie Curie before Warsaw's Radium Institute. During the 1944 Second World War Warsaw Uprising against the Nazi German
occupation, the monument was damaged by gunfire; after the war it was
decided to leave the bullet marks on the statue and its pedestal. In 1955 Jozef Mazur created a stained glass panel of her, the Maria Skłodowska-Curie Medallion, featured in the University at Buffalo Polish Room.
A number of biographies are devoted to her. In 1938 her daughter, Ève Curie, published Madame Curie. In 1987 Françoise Giroud wrote Marie Curie: A Life. In 2005 Barbara Goldsmith wrote Obsessive Genius: The Inner World of Marie Curie. In 2011 Lauren Redniss published Radioactive: Marie and Pierre Curie, a Tale of Love and Fallout.
Greer Garson and Walter Pidgeon starred in the 1943 U.S. Oscar-nominated film, Madame Curie, based on her life. More recently, in 1997, a French film about Pierre and Marie Curie was released, Les Palmes de M. Schutz. It was adapted from a play of the same name. In the film, Marie Curie was played by Isabelle Huppert.
Curie is the subject of the play False Assumptions by Lawrence Aronovitch, in which the ghosts of three other women scientists observe events in her life. Curie has also been portrayed by Susan Marie Frontczak in her play Manya: The Living History of Marie Curie, a one-woman show performed in 30 US states and nine countries, by 2014.
Curie's likeness also has appeared on banknotes, stamps and coins around the world. She was featured on the Polish late-1980s 20,000-złoty banknote as well as on the last French 500-franc note, before the franc was replaced by the euro. Curie themed postage stamps from Mali, the Republic of Togo, Zambia, and the Republic of Guinea actually show a picture of Susan Marie Frontczak portraying Curie in a 2001 picture by Paul Schroeder.
On the first centenary of Marie Curie's second Nobel Prize in 2011, an allegorical mural was painted on the façade of her Warsaw birthplace.
It depicts an infant Maria Skłodowska holding a test tube from which
emanate the elements that she would discover as an adult: polonium and radium. Also in 2011, a new Warsaw bridge over the Vistula was named in her honor.