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Antoine Henri Becquerel
Henri
Becquerel was born into a family of scientists. His grandfather
had made important contributions in the field of electrochemistry
while his father had investigated the phenomena of fluorescence
and phosphorescence. Becquerel not only inherited their interest
in science, he also inherited the minerals and compounds studied
by his father. And so, upon learning how Wilhelm Röntgen discovered
X rays by observing the fluorescence they produced, Becquerel had
a ready source of fluorescent materials with which to pursue his
own investigations of these mysterious rays. The material Becquerel
chose to work with was a double sulfate of uranium and potassium
which he exposed to sunlight and placed on photographic plates wrapped
in black paper. When developed, the plates revealed an image of
the uranium crystals. Becquerel concluded "that the phosphorescent
substance in question emits radiation which penetrates paper opaque
to light." Initially he believed that the sun's energy was being
absorbed by the uranium which then emitted X rays. Further investigation,
on the 26th and 27 of February, was delayed because the skies over
Paris were overcast and the uranium-covered plates Becquerel intended
to expose to the sun were returned to a drawer. On the first of
March, he developed the photographic plates expecting only faint
images to appear. To his surprise, the images were clear and strong.
This meant that the uranium emitted radiation without an external
source of energy such as the sun. Becquerel had discovered radioactivity,
the spontaneous emission of radiation by a material. Later, Becquerel
demonstrated that the radiation emitted by uranium shared certain
characteristics with X rays but, unlike X rays, could be deflected
by a magnetic field and therefore must consist of charged particles.
For his discovery of radioactivity, Becquerel was awarded the1903
Nobel Prize for physics.
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