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Harriet Brooks

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Nationality
  
Role
  
Physicist

Alma mater
  
Fields
  
Name
  
Harriet Brooks


Harriet Brooks httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons33

Institutions
  
Barnard CollegeMcGill University

Known for
  
Discoverer of atomic recoil

Died
  
April 17, 1933, Montreal, Canada

Education
  
Bryn Mawr College, McGill University

Academic advisors
  
Academic advisor
  

Harriet brooks history project


Harriet Brooks (July 2, 1876 – April 17, 1933) was the first Canadian female nuclear physicist. She is most famous for her research on nuclear transmutations and radioactivity. Ernest Rutherford, who guided her graduate work, regarded her as being next to Marie Curie in the calibre of her aptitude. She was among the first persons to discover radon and to try to determine its atomic mass.

Contents

Harriet Brooks Canada wasnt ready for unsung physicist Harriet Brooks and its

Harriet Brooks


Life

Harriet Brooks Philosophy of Science Portal Canadian physicistHarriet Brooks

Harriet Brooks was born in Exeter, Ontario, in 1876 and she graduated with a bachelor of arts degree in mathematics and natural philosophy from McGill University in 1898.

Harriet Brooks Harriet Brooks pioneering Canadian nuclear physicist

Brooks was the first graduate student in Canada of Sir Ernest Rutherford (then a professor at McGill University), under whom she worked immediately after graduating. With Rutherford, she worked on electricity and magnetism for her master's degree in 1901. She was the first woman at McGill to receive a master's degree. Following her master's degree, she was a fellow at Bryn Mawr College, and then she took a fellowship at the University of Cambridge.

Harriet Brooks Harriet Brooks pioneering Canadian nuclear physicist

After her master's degree under Rutherford, she also did a series of experiments to determine the nature of the radioactive emissions from thorium. These experiments served as one of the foundations for the development of nuclear science.

Harriet Brooks QUOTES BY HARRIET BROOKS AZ Quotes

For a short period, Brooks also worked under the supervision of Marie Curie.

Harriet Brooks Canada wasnt ready for unsung physicist Harriet Brooks and its

In 1904, Brooks was appointed to the faculty of Barnard College in New York City, and in 1907 she married Frank Pitcher and then left the field of physics.

The obituary of Harriet Brooks was published by the New York Times on April 18, 1933, recording that she had died the previous day in Montreal at the age of 57, crediting her as the "Discoverer of the Recoil of a Radioactive Atom." Brooks is considered one of the leading women of her time in the field of nuclear physics, second only to Marie Curie. She is a member of the Canadian Science and Engineering Hall of Fame.

Buildings

  • The Harriet Brooks Building, a nuclear research laboratory at Canadian Nuclear Laboratories.
  • References

    Harriet Brooks Wikipedia