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Dr Roman Luboradzki About the Hero of the Opera "Madame Curie"
2011-11-29
Maria Skłodowska-Curie was an active and avid cyclist, who also held a driving license and organised mobile x-ray laboratories during World War I, but first and foremost she was a female scientist, who was not afraid of hard, backbreaking work – says Dr. Roman Luboradzki from the Institute of Physical Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences about the Polish nobel prize winner, heroine of Elżbieta Sikora’s opera, in an interview for PWM.“Maria Skłodowska-Curie is a little known figure. I was particularly attracted by the fact that she was an ordinary person that she wasn’t a statue,” said Dr. Roman Luboradzki. “What we value in her, besides her scientific achievements of course, is just this open mind, that she lived like everyone else. She took her first steps under the direction of Becquerel, who recommended her doctoral thesis on an apparently quite boring theme, namely finding out why some types of uranium ore showed a much higher radioactivity than others. It turned out that there were two unknown elements, polonium and radium, which she laboriously isolated, described, characterised. I am not even able to imagine what kind of backbreaking work this was.”
We invite you to listen to the entire interview bringing you closer to the silhouette of the Polish scientist.
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