Laboratory of Pierre and Marie Curie
Pierre and Marie Curie in their laboratory
Marie Curie, Polish-French physicist
Marie Curie, Polish-French chemist
Marie and Pierre Curie, French physicists
Marie and Pierre Curie, physicists
Pierre Curie, French physicist
Portrait of Marie & Irene Curie, French physicists
Marie Curie and students, 1910s
Container of the chemical element polonium
Marie Curie at the White House, 1921
Helene Langevin-Joliot lecture at CERN, July 2017
肖像画
Autunite
Torbernite
Connellite crystals
Herta Regina Leng, Austrian-American physicist
Testing sulphur for magnetic properties
Seventh Solvay Conference, 1933
Transmission electron microscopy, 1950s
Transmission electron microscopy, 1960s
Marion Langhorne Howard Brickwedde and Ferdinand Brickwedde
William Hyde Wollaston, British chemist
Able Day atom bomb test, 1946
Dalton's list of atomic and molecular symbols
Dalton's symbols of compound elements
Hertha Ayrton
Ratemeter measuring radio active source.
Thorianite
Calibrating radiotherapy equipment
Irene Joliot-Curie, French nuclear physicist
Container of the chemical element selenium
Michael Faraday, British physicist
Radium decay
Raymond Thayer Birge, US physicist
Henry Crew, US physicist
Matthew Sands
Arthur Webster, US physicist
Gabriele Rabel, Austrian physicist
Weill and Nielsen, French physicist and US engineer
Edouard Branly, French physicist
Joseph Henry, American scientist
Samuel Milner, British physicist
Ugo Fano, Italian theoretical physicist
Andre-Marie Ampere, French physicist
John Dalton, British chemist
Abbe Nollet at the College of Navarre
Alessandro Volta, Italian physicist
Cassiopeia A, composite X-ray image
Robert Boyle, Anglo-Irish chemist
William Swann, American physicist
Ernest Rutherford, New Zealand physicist
Laser Megajoule monocrystal
Testing iron for magnetic properties
Michael Faraday, English physicist
Alhazen's Book of Optics, title page
Robert Boyle, Irish chemist
Scientists receiving honorary degrees at Delhi University
Robert Bunsen, Gustav Kirchoff and Henry Roscoe
Scientists from University of Breslau, 1852
Radioactive container
Chinese-US physicist Chien-Shiung Wu and colleagues, 1963
Discovery of quasicrystals, 1985
Alexander Dallas Bache, US physicist
Eugene Theodore Booth, American nuclear physicist
Albert Wallace Hull, American physicist
Joseph Henry, American physicist
Davisson and Germer, US physicists
Clinton Joseph Davisson, US physicist
Lewis Richard Koller, American physicist
Silicon, polarised light micrograph
Sir John Herschel
Radioactivity warning symbol in smoke alarm
Red ball symbolising oxygen atom
Film badge radiation dosimeter
Film badge radiation dosimeters
Arsenobetaine organoarsenic molecule
William Whewell, English polymath
William Whewell, British polymath
Clarence Whitney Kanolt, American physicist
Chien-Shiung Wu and Wallace Brode, 1958
William Ramsay, Scottish chemist
Charles Baskerville, US chemist
Fay Cluff Brown, US physicist and inventor
Harry Allister Kirkpatrick, American physicist
Sir John Douglas Cockcroft.
Gaston Plante, French physicist
Radiation sample preparation
Alpha-beta radiation analysis
Alpha spectroscopy analysis
Bertram Boltwood, US radiochemist
Americium in smoke detector
Measuring the half-life of protactinium
Edward Morely, American physicist and chemist
William Coblentz, US physicist
Carl Wilhelm Scheele, Swedish Pomeranian chemist
William Crookes, British physicist
Early phosphorescent light photograph
Tesla demonstrating artificial daylight, 1890s
Galvani Luigi
Abbe Nollet
Musschenbroek invents the Leyden jar
PETRUS VAN MUSSCHENBROEK (1692 - 1761)
Abel Niepce, French physicist
Mona Hagyard with Solar Vector Magnetograph, 1990
Vesto Melvin Slipher, American astronomer
Frederic de Hoffmann, nuclear physicist
Robert Burt, US physicist and inventor
Aurel Stodola, Slovak engineer and physicist
Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin, British-US astronomer
Iris with radiation warning sign
キュリー夫人の銅像
Humphry Davy (1778-1829), English chemist
Thomas Young, English physicist
Albert Einstein (1879-1955), Physicist, Head and Shoulders Portrait, Harris & Ewing, 1921
C H Johnson, US physicist
Silicon
Wineland, Cornell and Phillips, NIST Nobel laureates
Bertrand Goldschmidt, French physicist
Maurice de Broglie, French physicist
Percy Williams Bridgman, US physicist
Walter Brattain, US physicist
Rosalyn Yalow, US medical physicist
Fritz Reiche, German physicist
James Joule, British physicist
Foucault pendulum
Portrait Of Robert Boyle
William Wollaston, English chemist
Heysham Nuclear power Station, Lancashire, UK
Marie Curie
Andre-Marie Ampere, French mathematician
18th Century laboratory, artwork
Particle rays, artwork
Geiger counter
Radiation contamination monitor
Radiation monitor
Personal radiation detector
Cacodylic acid herbicide molecule
Cyclosarin nerve agent molecule
Phosphoric acid molecule
Dimercaprol metal poisoning antidote
Phosphoric acid mineral acid molecule
Jacques Babinet
Portrait of E. Rutherford and W. H. Bragg
Henry Cavendish, British physical chemist
William Grove, Welsh physicist and jurist
Faraday's safety glasses
Richard C Tolman, US physicist
Paul Cioffi, American physicist
Karl Kelchner Darrow, American physicist
Bismuth, SEM
Silica microspheres, SEM
Ceramic brake disc, SEM
Reinforced plastic, SEM
Silicon crystal, macrophotograph
TMD monolayer semiconductor molecule
Open path spectrometer
Dominic 'Sunset' atom bomb test, 1962
Dominic 'Bluestone' atom bomb test, 1962
Dominic 'Androscoggin' atom bomb test, 1962
Data processing computer in CERN, 1971