Pierre Curie

@Nobel Laureate in Physics, Family and Family

Pierre Curie was a French physicist and Nobel laureate

May 15, 1859

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: May 15, 1859
  • Died on: April 19, 1906
  • Nationality: French
  • Famous: Nobel Laureate in Physics, Scientists, Physicists
  • City/State: Paris
  • Spouses: Marie Curie
  • Siblings: Jacques

Pierre Curie born at

Paris, France

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Birth Place

He met Marie Skłodowska (also known as Marie Curie) through a common friend and fell in love with her. Impressed with her love for science, he proposed marriage to her. The couple got married in 1895 and was blessed with two daughters.

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Personal Life

His daughter Irene Joliot-Curie was also a prominent scientist and Nobel laureate herself. His other daughter, Eve, became a writer.

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Personal Life

He died in an accident on 19 April 1906 when he slipped and fell under a horse-drawn cart and the cart ran over his head fracturing his skull. He died instantly.

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Personal Life

He was born on May 15, 1859 to Eugene Curie and his wife Sophie Claire Curie in Paris, France. His father was a doctor and educated his son himself when he was young.

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Childhood & Early Life

Pierre was an intelligent young boy and displayed an aptitude for mathematics and geometry as a teenager. He earned a degree in mathematics by the time he was 16 and entered the Faculty of Sciences at the Sorbonne from where he earned his licence ès sciences in 1878.

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Childhood & Early Life

He could not continue his studies for want of funds and took up a job as a laboratory instructor where he worked until 1882. Then he was made in charge of all practical work in the Physics and Industrial Chemistry Schools.

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Childhood & Early Life

During his early career, he used to work in collaboration with his brother, Jacques. Together they studied crystallography and discovered piezoelectric effects. Working in this field made him turn his attention to magnetism.

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Childhood & Early Life

For his doctoral thesis he experimented to see if any transitions existed between the three types of magnetism: ferromagnetism, paramagnetism, and diamagnetism. He defended his thesis on magnetism in 1895 and obtained his Doctor of Science degree.

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Childhood & Early Life

He was appointed as the Professor of Physics in 1895. By now he was married to another physicist, Marie Skłodowska, who took the name Marie Curie after marriage.

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Career

Together with his wife he conducted experiments on what would become known as radioactive substances. The couple did not even have a well-equipped laboratory to work in and they faced financial problems too. But nothing could dampen their passion for science.

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Career

Another scientist, Henri Becquerel, had discovered the concept that would later be called “radioactivity” in 1896 and the Curies were determined to study a mineral, pitchblende, which had superior radioactivity as compared to uranium.

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Career

The Curie couple discovered radium and polonium by fractionation of pitchblende in 1898. The discovery of radium and the work done by the couple in this field would pave the way for much of the subsequent research in the area of nuclear physics and chemistry.

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Career

Pierre focused on studying the luminous and chemical effects of radiations by calorimetry. His studies paved the way for further research leading to radium therapy.

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Career

As a physicist he had made significant contributions to the fields of crystallography, magnetism, piezoelectricity and radioactivity. He proposed the Curie’s law and along with a student, made the first discovery of nuclear energy. Much of the later works in nuclear chemistry and physics are based upon his initial research.

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Major Works