Both were French physicists and chemists, although his wife Marie was originally from Poland. As a result of their joint research, they discovered the radioactive substance radium in 1898, and shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1903. After Pierre's death, Marie succeeded in isolating metallic radium, and was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1911. Source: Obunsha World History Dictionary, Third Edition About Obunsha World History Dictionary, Third Edition |
ともにフランスの物理学者・化学者。ただし,妻マリーはポーランド出身 共同研究の結果,1898年放射性物質のラジウムを発見し,1903年ノーベル物理学賞をふたりで受賞。ピエールの死後,マリーは金属ラジウムの分離に成功し,1911年にはノーベル化学賞を受賞した。 出典 旺文社世界史事典 三訂版旺文社世界史事典 三訂版について 情報 |
<<: "The Life of Madame Curie" - Curie Fujinden
An instrument that converts force into displacemen...
The American Securities and Exchange Commission. I...
...Drugstore beetles, cigarette beetles, and othe...
…the stomach is a sac-like part of the digestive ...
A general term for birds in the family Corvidae, s...
This is the amount of a drug prescribed by the Ph...
It is an education that builds on the foundations...
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (...
…[Kou Aoki]. … *Some of the terminology that ment...
One of China's minority groups. They live in t...
A representative novel by British novelist H. Fiel...
A genus of filamentous cyanobacteria, it has heter...
In the Edo period, the right to occupy and use fis...
A city in central Nagano Prefecture. It was incorp...
In Greek mythology, the seven daughters of the Ti...