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Monday, 25 July 2022

Google remembers Stephanie Maracaniano, the discoverer of artificial radiation

Google remembers Stephanie Maracaniano, the adventurer of artificial radiation. 

Google moment flashed back Romanian physicist Stefania Marasinio with a portrait. moment Google Doodle is celebrating its 140th anniversary. We all know about radio exertion. Maracinienu played a crucial part in its discovery. Stephanie completed her physical and chemical wisdom degrees in 1910 and also began tutoring at a girls ’ academy in Bucharest. During this time he also entered a education from the Romanian Ministry of Science. Stephanie also decided to do graduate exploration at the Radium Institute in Paris. 

Radium is known as Marie Curie’s discovery. At that time the Radium Institute under the direction of Marie Curie was getting world notorious. Stefania also started her exploration at this institute. Then he began work on his PhD thesis on polonium. Polonium was also discovered by Marie Curie. 

While probing the half- life of polonium, Maracinienu set up that its half- life depended on the essence on which it was placed. Then she was surprised to learn that the nascence shafts emitted from polonium transferred some of the essence tittles to radioactive isotopes. His exploration was called the discovery of artificial radiation. 

After working at the Astronomical Observatory in Moden for four times, she returned to Romania and set up her first laboratory to study radioactivity. He studied artificial rain, for which he also visited Algeria. He also studied the relationship between earthquakes and rains. He was the first to say that earthquakes do when the radio exertion in the center is veritably high. 

In 1935 Marie Curie’s son Irene Curie and her hubby entered a common Nobel Prize for the discovery of artificial radiation. Maracannio didn't claim the Nobel but sought recognition for his donation to its discovery. His discovery was honored by the Romanian Academy of lores in 1936. Where Stefania got the chance to work as a exploration director but she noway got world recognition for her discovery. 


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