She also left behind several memorable quotations, the most emblematic being: “Nothing in life is to be feared; it is only to ...
"I loved this woman who is unapologetic. I loved this woman who is uncompromising. I love this woman who really does not care, because she does not have the time to care about what people may think ...
The Musée Curie, nestled in the historic heart of Paris near the Panthéon, offers a compelling journey through the ...
The world has waited long for a first-hand account of the life and work of Pierre Curie and his distinguished collaborator and widow, Marie Sklodowska Curie. Fortunately this greatest and most modest ...
When Marie and Pierre Curie discovered the natural radioactive elements polonium and radium, they did something truly remarkable– they uncovered an entirely new property of matter. The Curies’ work ...
Radioactive begins with the death of Marie Curie. As she is wheeled into hospital, the film suggests she is remembering her first meeting with her husband. Life flashes before our eyes before we die, ...
The 120 sq. meters (1,300 sq. feet) stone house where the Nobel-winning scientist couple Marie Sklodowska-Curie and Pierre Curie spent vacation and weekends from 1904-1906 in Saint-Remy-les-Chevreuse, ...
They called it the shed, though it was more of a dilapidated hangar. A former anatomy theater, it housed old pinewood tables, a cast-iron stove and a blackboard—all under a high ceiling that leaked.
Marie Curie holds a special place in Nobel Prize history—not only the first woman to win the prize, but also one of very few people to have been awarded a second. Both were connected with the element ...
Marie Curie, a Polish-born scientist, revolutionized physics and chemistry. She discovered radioactive elements Polonium and ...