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Antoine
Henri Becquerel was born in Paris on December 15, 1852, a member of a
distinguished family of scholars and scientists. His father, Alexander
Edmond Becquerel, was a Professor of Applied Physics and had done research
on solar radiation and on phosphorescence, while his grandfather, Antoine
César, had been a Fellow of the Royal Society and the inventor of an electrolytic
method for extracting metals from their ores. He entered the Polytechnic
in 1872, then the government department of Pontset-Chaussees in 1874,
becoming ingénieur in 1877 and being promoted to ingénieur-en-chef in
1894. In 1888 he acquired the degree of docteur-ès-sciences. From 1878
he had held an appointment as an Assistant at the Museum of Natural History,
taking over from his father in the Chair of Applied Physics at the Conservatoire
des Arts et Metiers. In 1892 he was appointed Professor of Applied Physics
in the Department of Natural History at the Paris Museum. He became a
Professor at the Polytechnic in 1895.
Becquerel's earliest work was concerned with the plane polarization of
light, with the phenomenon of phosphorescence and with the absorption
of light by crystals (his doctorate thesis). He also worked on the subject
of terrestrial magnetism. In 1896, his previous work was overshadowed
by his discovery of the phenomenon of natural radioactivity. Following
a discussion with Henri Poincaré on the radiation which had recently been
discovered by R?ntgen (X-rays) and which was accompanied by a type of
phosphorescence in the vacuum tube, Becquerel decided to investigate whether
there was any connection between X-rays and naturally occurring phosphorescence.
He had inherited from his father a supply of uranium salts, which phosphoresce
on exposure to light. When the salts were placed near to a photographic
plate covered with opaque paper, the plate was discovered to be fogged.
The phenomenon was found to be common to all the uranium salts studied
and was concluded to be a property of the uranium atom. Later, Becquerel
showed that the rays emitted by uranium, which for a long time were named
after their discoverer, caused gases to ionize and that they differed
from X-rays in that they could be deflected by electric or magnetic fields.
For his discovery of spontaneous radioactivity Becquerel was awarded half
of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1903, the other half being given to
Pierre and Marie Curie for their study of the Becquerel radiation.
Becquerel published his findings in many papers, principally in the Annales
de Physique et de Chimie and the Comptes Rendus de l'Academie des Sciences.
He was elected a
member of the Academie des Sciences de France in 1889 and succeeded Berthelot
as Life Secretary of that body. He was a member also of the Accademia
dei Lincei and of the Royal Academy of Berlin, amongst others. He was
made an Officer of the Legion of Honour in 1900.
He was married to
Mlle. Janin, the daughter of a civil engineer. They had a son Jean, b.
1878, who was also a physicist: the fourth generation of scientists in
the Becquerel family.
Antoine Henri Becquerel
died at Le Croisic on August 25, 1908.
From Nobel Lectures,
Physics 1901-1921.
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