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Radium Collection (page 2)

"Discovering the Power of Radium: Marie Curie's Nobel Prize-Winning Breakthrough" Marie Curie, a brilliant Polish-French physicist

Background imageRadium Collection: Radium experiment, 1904. Artist: Poyet

Radium experiment, 1904. Artist: Poyet
Radium experiment, 1904. Paths of alpha, beta, and gamma particles from a radium sample placed between the poles of an electromagnet, as used in Marie and Pierre Curies laboratory, Paris

Background imageRadium Collection: Work of Marie and Pierre Curie, 1904

Work of Marie and Pierre Curie, 1904. High voltage equipment used by Pierre and Marie Curie to investigate the electrical conductivity of air exposed to radium. From La Nature. (Paris, 1904)

Background imageRadium Collection: The Raid from Mars, Amazing Stories SciFi Magazine Cover

The Raid from Mars, Amazing Stories SciFi Magazine Cover
The Raid from Mars - Martians raid Earth in search of radium

Background imageRadium Collection: Marie Sk?odowska Curie, born Maria Salomea Sk?odowska, 1867 - 1934

Marie Sk?odowska Curie, born Maria Salomea Sk?odowska, 1867 - 1934. Polish and naturalized-French physicist and chemist. From The Pageant of the Century, published 1934

Background imageRadium Collection: Texts Radium Multiview postcards Guest houses

Texts Radium Multiview postcards Guest houses
Texts, Radium, Multiview postcards, Guest houses in Saxony, Garden furniture, Buildings in Landkreis Sachsische Schweiz-Osterzgebirge, Barenburg, 1915, Landkreis Sachsische Schweiz-Osterzgebirge

Background imageRadium Collection: Buildings Schneeberg Erzgebirge Churches Miners

Buildings Schneeberg Erzgebirge Churches Miners
Buildings in Schneeberg (Erzgebirge), Churches in Schneeberg, Miners from Germany, Bobbin lacemaking, Radium, 1921, Erzgebirgskreis, Schneeberg, Blick von Schlema auf Schneeberg

Background imageRadium Collection: Snow Covered Mountain With Frosted Evergreen Trees On Hillside With Clouds In The Valley And Blue

Snow Covered Mountain With Frosted Evergreen Trees On Hillside With Clouds In The Valley And Blue Sky; Radium Hot Springs, British Columbia, Canada

Background imageRadium Collection: Portrait of Marie Curie

Portrait of Marie Curie
Marie Curie, the Polish-French chemist, (1867 - 1934). Curie worked on radioactivity, a term she coined to describe the rays given off by uranium

Background imageRadium Collection: Marie Curie, a Polish-French chemist

Marie Curie, a Polish-French chemist, born in Warsaw in 1867 and died in France in 1934. Curie worked on radioactivity, a term she coined to describe the rays given off by uranium

Background imageRadium Collection: Ufos / British Columbia /

Ufos / British Columbia /
Domed disc seen by Frank Slotta near Radium Hot Springs, British Columbia, leading to a missing time experience

Background imageRadium Collection: POSTER: CANCER, c1937. X-ray, radium, surgery - the three recognized treatments for cancer

POSTER: CANCER, c1937. X-ray, radium, surgery - the three recognized treatments for cancer. Silkscreen poster for the for the Works Progress Adminstrations Federal Art Project, c1937

Background imageRadium Collection: AD: UNDARK, 1920. American advertisement for Undark Radium Luminous Material. Illustration

AD: UNDARK, 1920. American advertisement for Undark Radium Luminous Material. Illustration, 1920

Background imageRadium Collection: AD: UNDARK, 1921. American advertisement for Undark Radium Luminous Material. Illustration

AD: UNDARK, 1921. American advertisement for Undark Radium Luminous Material. Illustration, 1921

Background imageRadium Collection: AD: RADIOLITE WATCH, 1920. Advertisement for Ingersoll Radiolite Watches, 1920

AD: RADIOLITE WATCH, 1920. Advertisement for Ingersoll Radiolite Watches, 1920

Background imageRadium Collection: 02

02
CANADA, British Columbia, The Rockies. Village of Radium Hot Springs: Resort Sign

Background imageRadium Collection: Diagram of an apparatus, c1900, by Ernest Rutherford (1871-1937)

Diagram of an apparatus, c1900, by Ernest Rutherford (1871-1937), that measures the atomic weight of a substance
RUTHERFORD: APPARATUS. Diagram of an apparatus, c1900, by Ernest Rutherford (1871-1937), that measures the atomic weight of a substance

Background imageRadium Collection: High voltage equipment used by Pierre and Marie Curie to investigate the electrical

High voltage equipment used by Pierre and Marie Curie to investigate the electrical conductivity of air exposed to radium. Engraving published Paris 1904

Background imageRadium Collection: Radium Institute, Paris, where Marie CURIE (1867-1934), Polish-born French physicist

Radium Institute, Paris, where Marie CURIE (1867-1934), Polish-born French physicist, was director of research (1918-1934)

Background imageRadium Collection: A stage in the separation of radium from pitchblende using sodium carbonate. Curies laboratory

A stage in the separation of radium from pitchblende using sodium carbonate. Curies laboratory, Paris c1900. Engraving

Background imageRadium Collection: Apparatus used by the Curies to investigate the deflection of the beta rays from radium

Apparatus used by the Curies to investigate the deflection of the beta rays from radium (R) in magnetic field. Engraving published Paris 1904

Background imageRadium Collection: Radium Institute, Warsaw, Poland, inaugurated 29 May 1932 in the presence of Marie Curie

Radium Institute, Warsaw, Poland, inaugurated 29 May 1932 in the presence of Marie Curie and her sister Bronya Dluska

Background imageRadium Collection: Part of Pierre and Marie Curies laboratory, Paris. Engraving published 1904

Part of Pierre and Marie Curies laboratory, Paris. Engraving published 1904

Background imageRadium Collection: Paths of alpha, beta, and gamma rays from a radium sample placed between poles of electromagnet

Paths of alpha, beta, and gamma rays from a radium sample placed between poles of electromagnet, as used in Curies laboratory, Paris. Engraving published Paris, 1904

Background imageRadium Collection: Marie Curie (1867-1934) Polish-born French physicist. Award Nobel prize for physics

Marie Curie (1867-1934) Polish-born French physicist. Award Nobel prize for physics jointly with her husband, Pierre, and Henri Becquerel for work on radioactivity (1903)

Background imageRadium Collection: Marie Curie (1867-1934) Polish-born French physicist, in 1925 with her daughter Irene Joliot-Curie

Marie Curie (1867-1934) Polish-born French physicist, in 1925 with her daughter Irene Joliot-Curie (1897-1956), nuclear physicist, who worked as her mothers assistant at the Radium Institute, Paris

Background imageRadium Collection: Mining Pitchblende, Cornwall, England. Radium, isolated by the Curies in 1898, is

Mining Pitchblende, Cornwall, England. Radium, isolated by the Curies in 1898, is extracted from this ore. Chromolithograph card published 1916

Background imageRadium Collection: Marie Curie

Marie Curie

Background imageRadium Collection: Madam Marie Curie in lab

Madam Marie Curie in lab

Background imageRadium Collection: Discovery of radium by the Curies, 1898

Discovery of radium by the Curies, 1898
Discovery of radium by the Curies, as depicted in a caricature published in the British weekly magazine Vanity Fair in 1904

Background imageRadium Collection: The only safe weapons against cancer are surgery, x-rays and

The only safe weapons against cancer are surgery, x-rays and radium Do not trust your life to other methods. Poster identifying proper treatments for cancer. Date 1938

Background imageRadium Collection: Radiochemical Centre

Radiochemical Centre
Process boxes for the production of tritium compounds at the Radiochemical Centre, Amersham, Buckinghamshire, England. Date: December 1964

Background imageRadium Collection: THE RADIUM MASTER

THE RADIUM MASTER (Jim Vanny) Earth explorers on Urania are prisoners of a robot controlled by the masked Emperor Date: 1930

Background imageRadium Collection: Geiger counter, for detecting radioactivity

Geiger counter, for detecting radioactivity
Geiger counter, a device used for detecting radioactivity by its ionising effect as it passes through a gas at low pressure (contained in the cylindrical tube)

Background imageRadium Collection: Radioactive emission from radium

Radioactive emission from radium
Radium alpha particles. Coloured image of the radioactive emission of alpha particles from radium. A speck of radium salt was placed on a special emulsion on a photographic plate; when developed

Background imageRadium Collection: Madame Curie visiting a war hospital

Madame Curie visiting a war hospital
Photograph showing Marie Curie, discoverer of radium, visiting the British field-hospital at Furnes where she took X-rays of all cases

Background imageRadium Collection: Radium Airship

Radium Airship
Other worlds will surely develop their own technologies for space travel : this radium-powered airship of Saturn uses the planets natural resources

Background imageRadium Collection: A radium safe

A radium safe
A safe at the Radium Institute, showing lead blocks holding radium needles. 4 inches of lead sat between where the radium was kept and the front of the safe

Background imageRadium Collection: William Ramsay / Tatler 04

William Ramsay / Tatler 04
SIR WILLIAM RAMSAY British chemist experimenting with radium at University College, London, in 1904

Background imageRadium Collection: Futuristic central heating

Futuristic central heating
A futuristic form of central heating, using radium -- perhaps not the healthiest of ideas, as it is radioactive?




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"Discovering the Power of Radium: Marie Curie's Nobel Prize-Winning Breakthrough" Marie Curie, a brilliant Polish-French physicist, made history with her groundbreaking research on radium. Alongside her husband Pierre Curie, they revolutionized the field of science and medicine. In 1903, Marie Curie became the first woman to win a Nobel Prize for her work in physics. Her relentless dedication led to the discovery of radium, an element that would forever change our understanding of radiation. Caricatures may have depicted Marie Curie as she delved into uncharted territory, fearlessly exploring the properties of this mysterious substance. With X-ray technology already recognized as a medical breakthrough, radium emerged as another potential treatment option alongside surgery. The DDE-90027769 compound symbolizes the scientific identification assigned to radium by researchers worldwide. Its significance lies in its ability to unlock new possibilities in various fields such as medicine and industry. Captured in a black-and-white photograph is Marie Curie herself—a trailblazing figure who defied gender norms and shattered glass ceilings. Her contributions continue to inspire generations of scientists and chemists today. Beyond her scientific achievements, other images showcase Pierre Curie engaging in conversations with Sir William Ramsay—an exchange that likely sparked further advancements in their respective fields. Moreover, an altimeter designed by Zeppelin creator G Lufft serves as a testament to how far-reaching the impact has been across different industries throughout history. As we reflect upon these captivating glimpses into Marie Curie's life and work from over a century ago—her portrait from around 1901—we are reminded not only of her brilliance but also her enduring legacy that continues to shape our world today.