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1901 2012
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The Nobel Prize in Physics 1903
Henri Becquerel, Pierre Curie, Marie Curie
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Dr. H.R. Törnebladh, President of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences on December 10, 1903
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
The last decade's record of development in the physical sciences
is outstanding for the discoveries, as unexpected as they are
impressive, that have been made. The Royal Academy of Sciences
has been accorded the task of beginning to carry out the noble
intentions expressed by Alfred Nobel in his will dating from this
fruitful period for the physical sciences. The great discovery,
to which the Academy of Sciences resolved to award the Nobel
Prize of 1903 for Physics, marks a stage in this brilliant
expansion, while it is at the same time strictly linked to the
discovery which won the very first Nobel Prize for Physics.
Further to the discovery of Röntgen rays, the question was
raised whether they could not also be produced in other
conditions than those in which they had been first observed.
During the course of experiments in this field, Professor Henri
Becquerel achieved results that not only contained an answer to
this question, but led to a new discovery of the first
order.
When electricity is discharged through a tube filled with highly
rarefied gas, the phenomenon of radiation occurs in this tube.
This has been called cathode radiation, which when it meets an
object in its turn produces the rays discovered by Röntgen.
It often happens that these cathode rays also give rise to
phenomena of light, called fluorescence and phosphorescence, in
objects they encounter. Now it is this circumstance which
occasioned Becquerel's experiments. He asked himself if the
bodies whence the phosphorescent rays emanate, after having been
subjected for a longer or lesser time to the action of ordinary
light, would not likewise emit Röntgen rays. To solve this
problem, Becquerel made use of the well-known property of
Röntgen rays to affect a photographic plate. Having placed
aluminium foil upon a sensitive plate, he laid glass laminae on
it with the phosphorescent materials that were under study,
contending that if the photographic plate was a£ fected
through the aluminium foil, this could only take place by means
of rays which like those of Röntgen had the property of
passing through metals. Carrying his research further, Becquerel
found that the sensitive plate bore images from certain
substances, in particular from all the salts of uranium. He thus
demonstrated that these substances emit rays of a special nature,
distinct from ordinary light. Tests continued and he established
an even more extraordinary fact, namely that this radiation is
not in direct relation to the phenomenon of phosphorescence, that
phosphorescent materials as well as those which are not can give
rise to this radiation, that previous lighting is never necessary
for the phenomenon to occur, and lastly that the radiation in
question continues with invariable force to all appearances
without its origin being traced to any of the known sources of
energy. This was how Becquerel made the discovery of spontaneous
radioactivity and the rays that bear his name. This discovery
revealed a new property of matter and a new source of energy, the
latter of puzzling origin. It goes without saying that a
discovery such as this was bound to excite the liveliest interest
in the scientific world and give birth to a whole host of new
investigations with the aim of making a thorough study of the
nature of the Becquerel rays and determining their origin. It was
at this point that M. and Mme. Curie undertook the most
comprehensive and systematic research into this topic, examining
the majority of simple substances and a large number of minerals
to find if possible new substances with the remarkable properties
of uranium. The first discovery in this field was made at
approximately the same time by the German Schmidt and by Mme.
Curie, both of whom found that thorium possesses radioactive
properties to about the same degree as uranium.
During research, scientists have made full use of the property of
the Becquerel rays, to make conductors of electricity out of
bodies that are not so in normal circumstances. As a result, if
rays of this kind fall on an electroscope charged with
electricity, it will discharge more or less quickly, according to
the greater or lesser activity of these rays which make the air
round the electroscope a conductor. The electroscope has thus to
some extent played the same part in respect of radioactive
materials as the spectroscope in the search for new elements. M.
and Mme. Curie, having thus found with the aid of the
electroscope that the radioactive properties of the mineral
pitchblende were more marked than those of uranium, came to the
conclusion that pitchblende must contain one or more new
radioactive substances. By breaking up pitchblende into its
chemical components and examining, again with the aid of the
electroscope, the radioactivity of the products that were
obtained, they at last managed by means of a series of solutions
and precipitates to isolate the materials that were distinguished
by radioactivity of extraordinary intensity. Some idea of the
prodigious work these results entail may be formed from the fact
that it takes 1,000 kg of raw material to produce a few decigrams
of these active substances. Of these, polonium was discovered by
M. and Mme. Curie, radium was also discovered by them in
collaboration with Bémont, and actinium by Debierne. Of all
these materials, at least radium has been shown to be a simple
substance.
Becquerel had already shown by the study of radiation in uranium
some of the most important properties of these rays. It was
however only by means of the highly radioactive substances we
have just mentioned that it became possible to carry out more
comprehensive research into the Becquerel rays and in certain
respects to amend findings on them. Foremost among scientists who
carried out this programme, we find both Becquerel and also M.
and Mme. Curie.
Becquerel radiation resembles light in several respects.
Propagation is rectilinear. Like certain light wavelengths, it
has a strong photochemical action, causes phosphorescence, etc.
Yet it differs from light in certain essentials, for example by
its property to pass through metals and many other opaque bodies,
by the intensity with which it brings about the discharge of
bodies charged with electricity, and lastly by the absence of
phenomena of reflection, interference and refraction,
characteristic of light. In this the Becquerel rays are exactly
similar to Röntgen rays and cathode rays. It has been found
all the same that Becquerel radiation is not homogeneous, but is
composed of different kinds of rays, some of which like those of
Röntgen are not deflected by magnetic or electric forces,
while others are, like cathode rays or Goldstein rays. Like
Röntgen rays, Becquerel rays have a very strong
physiological effect; thus, for example, they attack the skin,
affect the eye, etc.
Lastly, certain of the radioactive substances have a special
property which bears no direct relation to their beams. This is
to make temporarily radioactive all the bodies in their
neighbourhood, by producing a radioactive emanation which
communicates the radioactive property to the surroundings.
It is thus beyond doubt that Becquerel rays are in strict
relation to Röntgen rays and cathode rays. The modern theory
of electrons, which is used to explain this last form of
radiation, has also been applied with the greatest success to
explain the Becquerel rays.
We could close our account of the discoveries of Becquerel and
the Curies at this point, as what we have covered is the main
result of research they undertook early in 1903 and which is
consequently to be considered in deciding the award of the Nobel
Prize for 1903. Surely the discoveries we have outlined are
important enough to deserve such a prize. These discoveries have
taught us that special forms of radiation that were only known
hitherto by electric discharges through rarefied gas are natural
phenomena of wide occurrence. We have gained knowledge of a
property of matter quite new to us, the capability of emitting,
spontaneously as it seems, these marvellous rays. We have gained
new methods, infinitely superior in subtlety to any we had in
this sphere, to examine under certain conditions the existence of
matter in nature. Finally we have found a new source of energy,
for which the full explanation is not yet forthcoming. It will
evidently give rise to new research of the very highest value in
physics and in chemistry.
The discoveries of Becquerel and the Curies in their own right
herald a new era in the history of the physical sciences. Now we
can only touch on the magnificent experiments carried out in this
domain last year by Curie who discovered in radium the great
spontaneous development of heat, together with the findings of
Rutherford and Ramsay on the release of helium by radium,
discoveries that are bound to be of great importance for the
physicist and for the chemist alike. The promise for the future
stemming from Becquerel's discovery seems near full
realization.
The discoveries and research of Becquerel and of M. and Mme.
Curie are closely bound up with each other; the latter were of
course co-workers. The Royal Academy of Sciences did not think it
right to distinguish between these eminent scientists, when it
came to awarding the discovery of spontaneous radioactivity a
Nobel Prize. The Academy thus deemed it equitable to share the
Nobel Physics Prize for 1903 by awarding one half to Professor
Henri Becquerel for the discovery of spontaneous radioactivity,
and the other half to Professor and Madame Curie for great merit,
of which they have given proof in work on rays first discovered
by Henri Becquerel.
Professor Becquerel. The brilliant
discovery of radioactivity shows us human knowledge in triumph,
exploring Nature by undeflected rays of genius that pass through
the vastness of space. Your victory serves as a shining
refutation of the ancient dictum, ignoramus - ignorabimus, we do
not know and we shall never know. It breeds the hope that
scientific toil will succeed in conquering new territories and
this is mankind's vital hope.
The great success of Professor and Madame Curie is the best
illustration of the old proverb, coninucta valent, union is
strength. This makes us look at God's word in an entirely new
light: "It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make
him an help meet for him. "
Nor is that all. This learned couple represent a team of
differing nationalities, a happy omen for mankind joining forces
in the development of science.
With sincere regret that these two prize-winners are prevented by
commitments from being with us, we are fortunate in having in
their stead the distinguished Minister, M. Marchand, representing
France who has most kindly consented to receive the prize awarded
to his fellow-countrymen.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1901-1921, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1967
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1903
MLA style: "Nobel Prize in Physics 1903 - Presentation Speech". Nobelprize.org. 23 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1903/press.html
