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• 1903 Nobelist
• 1911 Chemistry Nobelist
• 1911 Nobel chemist
• 3.7 x 10 to the 10th power disintegrations per second, to a physicist
• Chemist Marie
• Co-Nobelist of 1903
• Codiscoverer of radium
• Discoverer of radium
• Either of two 1903 Nobel laureates
• Either of two 1903 Nobelists
• Either of two 1903 Physics Nobelists
• Family name in science history
• First double Nobelist
• First female Nobelist
• First female professor at the University of Paris
• First two-time Nobelist
• First two-time, and first female, Nobelist
• First woman to teach at the Sorbonne
• French or Polish physicist
• French physicist
• Garson film role
• Irene, Marie or Pierre
• Last name of physicists Marie and Pierre
• Madame of radium fame
• Madame with a Nobel
• Marie who won two Nobel prizes
• Marie with two Nobels
• Married name of Maria Sklodowska
• Nobelist Marie
• Nobelist of 1903 and 1911
• Nobelists Marie and Pierre
• One of the four people who have won two Nobel Prizes
• Only person to win two Nobels in two different sciences
• Physicist from Poland
• Physicist Marie
• Physics Nobelist Marie
• Polonium discoverer
• Radioactivity measure
• Radioactivity researcher
• Radioactivity unit
• Radium co-discoverer
• Radium co-discoverer Marie
• Radium co-discoverer Marie or Pierre
• Radium discover
• Radium finder?
• Radium unit
• Scientist Marie or Pierre
• She coined radioactivity
• Two-time Nobel winner Marie
• Two-time Nobelist
• Two-time Nobelist Marie
• Unit of radioactivity
• Unit of radioactivity, named for radium codiscoverers
• Woman who won two Nobel prizes
• One (with her husband and Henri Becquerel) for research on radioactivity and another for her discovery of radium and polonium (1867-1934)
• A unit of radioactivity equal to the amount of a radioactive isotope that decays at the rate of 37,000,000,000 disintegrations per second
• French physicist
• French chemist (born in Poland) who won two Nobel Prizes
• Husband of Marie Curie (1859-1906)
Curie, römisches Versammlungshaus, Rathaus.
Ein solches war in jeder größeren Stadt, zumeist am Forum, errichtet. Ursprung: Romulus teilte jede der drei Tribus des römischen Volkes in zehn Curien; das Versammlungshaus derselben erhielt obigen Namen. Es war ein viereckiger Raum, zumeist mit Säulenstellungen und Vorhalle sowie einer Apsis versehen. Auch im Mittelalter wurde der Name besonders in bezug auf kirchliche Bauten verwendet, z.B. Curia personae ecclesiae, Pfarrwohnung, Curia fratrum, Kapitelhaus u.s.w.
Weinbrenner.
1) ист. курия
2) папская курия
II mкюри (единица измерения)
кюри (единица радиоактивности)
Curie {ky'ri:} n =, = физ.
кюри
кюри
2
кюри (единица радиоактивности)
кюри (единица радиоактивности)
n
кюрі, Кі