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Elemental
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Curium & meitnerium - in honour of two pioneering women

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There are only two chemical elements on the periodic table named after women: curium, in honour of Marie & Pierre Curie, & meitnerium after Lise Meitner. Allan Blackman from AUT introduces the women and their elements in ep 24 of Elemental.

Listen now 15 min

© RNZ Length 15 min 7 May 2019 Episode 24 ScienceEducational New Zealand Episodic

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© RNZ Length 15 min 7 May 2019 Episode 24 ScienceEducational New Zealand Episodic

Tales from the periodic table

Tales from the periodic table

This is an episodic podcast, so you can listen to it in any order, but episode one is a great place to start.

Listen to episode one here

There are only two chemical elements on the periodic table named after women: curium, in honour of Marie & Pierre Curie, & meitnerium after Lise Meitner. Allan Blackman from AUT introduces the women and their elements in ep 24 of Elemental.

Marie Curie and Lise Meitner were pioneering women chemists, and the only two women to have chemical elements named in their honour.

Curium, named after Marie Curie and her husband Pierre, is element number 96, which sits between americium and berkelium at the bottom of the periodic table.

It is a radioactive, synthetic element that was discovered in 1944. It is responsible for much of the radiation of spent nuclear fuel.

Marie Curie is the only person to have received two science Nobel Prizes: the Chemistry Nobel in 1903 which she shared with Pierre, and the Physics Nobel in 1911.

Marie Curie's lab notebooks are still too radioactive to study without wearing protective clothing.

Lise Meitner was born to Jewish parents in Vienna in 1878, and moved to Berlin to work in 1912. She was forced to flee from Nazi Germany to Sweden in 1938.

Although Lise was nominated for a Nobel Prize 48 times she never won one.

The synthetic element meitnerium is atomic number 109 and symbol Mt. It was discovered in 1982 but not named until 1997. Its German discoverers named it to "render justice to a victim of German racism and to credit in fairness a scientific life and work."

Allan Blackman from AUT introduces the women & their elements.

Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details


© RNZ | 15 min

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