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1. Мари Кюри родился в Варшаве 7 ноября 1867. Её отец был учителем науки и математики в школе в городе, и от него мало Мария Кюри, - который был ее польское имя - узнал ее первые уроки в науке. Мария желание было учиться в Сорбонне в Париже, и после многих лет ожидания она окончательно покинул родной земле в 1891 году. 2. в Париже Мария начал курс жесткий исследования и простой жизни. Она решимости работать на две степени магистра - один в физике, другой в математике. Это она пришлось работать в два раза так сложно, как обычный студент. Тем не менее она едва ли достаточно денег, чтобы жить. Она жила в беднейших квартале Парижа. Ночь за ночью после ее жесткого день работы в университете, она получила ее плохо меблированный номер и работал на ее книги неуклонно часов, иногда она была больше, чем мешок вишни. Хотя она часто слабых и больных, она работала таким образом в течение четырех лет. Она выбрала ее курса, и ничто не может превратить ее из него. 3. среди многих ученых Мария встречался и работал с в Париже было Pierre Curie. Pierre Curie, родился в 1859 году в Париже, был сыном доктора, и с раннего детства он был очарован науки. At sixteen he was a Bachelor of Science, and he took his Master's degree in Physics when he was eighteen: When helmet Maria Sklodowska he was thirty-five years old and was famous throughout Europe for his discoveries in magnetism. But in spite of the honour he had brought to France by his discoveries, the, French Government could only give him a very little salary as a reward, and the University of Paris refused him a laboratory of his own for his researches. 4. Pierre Curie and Maria Sklodowska, both of whom loved science more than anything else, very soon became the closest friends. They worked together constantly and discussed many problems of their researches. After little more than a year they fell in love with each other, and in 1895 Maria Sklodowska became Mme. Curie. Theirs was not only to be a very happy marriage but also one of the greatest scientific partnerships. Marie had been the greatest woman-scientist of her day but she was a mother too, a very loving one. There were their two little girls, Irene and Eye. 5. By this time Mme. Curie had obtained her Master’s degree in Physics and Mathematics, and was busy with researches on street. She now wished to obtain a Doctor’s degree. For this it was necessary to offer to the examiners a special study, called a thesis. For some time Pierre Curie had been interested in the work of a French scientist named Becquerel. There is a rare metal called uranium which, as Becquerel discovered, emits rays very much like X-rays. These rays made marks on a photographic plate when it was wrapped in black paper. The Curie got interested in these rays of uranium. What caused them? How strong were they? There were many such questions that puzzled Marie Curie and her husband. Here, they decided, was the very subject for Marie’s Doctor’s thesis. 6. The research was carried out under great difficulty. Mme. Curie had to use an old store-room at the University as her laboratory – she was refused a better room. It was cold, there was no proper apparatus and very little space for research work. Soon she discovered that the rays of uranium were like no other known rays. Marie Curie wanted to find out if other chemical substances might emit similar rays. So she began to examine every know chemical substance. Once after repeating her experiments time after time she found that a mineral called pitchblende emitted much more powerful rays than any she had already found. Now, an element is a chemical substance which so far as is known cannot be split up into other substances. As Mme. Curie had examined every known chemical element and none of them had emitted such powerful rays as pitchblende she could only decide that this mineral must contain some new element. 7. Scientists had declared that every element was already known to them. But all Mme. Curie’s experiments pointed out that it was not so. Pitchblende must contain some new and unknown element. There was no other explanation for the powerful rays which it emitted. At that moment Pierre Curie stopped his own investigations on the physics of crystals and joined his wife in her effort to find those more active unknown chemical elements. Scientists call the property of giving out such rays “radioactivity”, and Mme. Curie decided to call the new element “radium”, because it was more strongly radioactive than any known metal. In 1903 Marie and Pierre together with Henry Becquerel were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics. In 1911 Marie received the Nobel Prize In Chemistry. But the second prize went to her alone for in 1906 Pierre had died tragically in a traffic accident. Mme. Sklodowska-Curie, the leading woman-scientist, the greatest woman of her generation, has become the first person to receive a Nobel Prize twice. 8. Marie lived to see her story repeated. Her daughter Irene grew into a woman with the same interests as her mother's and she was deeply interested in her mother's work. From Marie she learned all about radiology and chose science for her career. At twenty-nine she married Frederic Joliot, a brilliant scientist at the Institute of Radium, which her parents had founded. Together the Joliot-Curies carried on the research work that Irene's mother had begun. In 1935 Irene and her husband won the Nobel Prize for their discovery of artificial radioactivity. So, Marie lived to see the completion of the great work, but she died on the eve of the award.
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