Presentation Speech by Professor W. Palmær, Chairman of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, on December 10, 1935
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
On the 10th of December, 1911, Marie
Sklodowska, a Polish chemist of world-wide reputation, wife
of Professor Pierre
Curie, was present at the solemn Swedish Nobel Prize ceremony
to receive the Prize for Chemistry "in recognition of her
services to the advancement of chemistry by the discovery of the
elements radium and polonium, by the isolation of radium and the
study of the nature and compounds of this remarkable element."
Previously, in 1903, she had received, jointly with Professor
Pierre Curie, half of the Nobel Prize in physics "in recognition
of the extra ordinary services they have rendered by their joint
researches on the radiation phenomena discovered by Professor
Henri
Becquerel", whilst the other half of the prize was
simultaneously awarded to Professor Becquerel "in recognition of
the extraordinary services he has rendered by his discovery of
spontaneous radioactivity".
It is evident that in 1903 it was the importance to physics of
the discoveries made which was the prime consideration. However,
their extraordinary importance in chemistry became increasingly
clear, in the main from the work of Marie Sklodowska-Curie, but
also from that of Pierre Curie while he was alive, and it was
considered fitting to award Madame Curie by an undivided Nobel
Prize for Chemistry - her husband had died in the meantime so
that his share in their work could no longer be rewarded. This
prize was duly presented in 1911, and Marie Sklodowska-Curie
thereby became the only person up to that time to have received
more than one Nobel Prize.
The capital importance of these discoveries is generally
recognized and two other Nobel Prizes in Chemistry have been
awarded for discoveries in the field of radioactive substances,
in 1908 to Lord Rutherford and
in 1922 to Frederick Soddy. I
need only recall the powerful remedy that radium has become in
medicine in the struggle against the cancerous diseases, the fact
that it has proved possible to calculate the minimum age of the
earth through the transformation of radioactive substances, and
that we have been able to form an idea of the internal energy of
atoms, of the possibility of using radioactive substances as
tracers, as they are called (a question to which I will return
later), and so on. What is more interesting from the scientific
point of view is that radium is spontaneously derived from
uranium and that afterwards by its spontaneous and continuous
disintegration it forms new elements, with lead as the final
product. All these transformations are accompanied by radiations
of different kinds and thus all the radioactive elements are
unstable, although in different degrees. It is customary to
define their stability by giving the time taken for them to
become half-decomposed, a period which can be determined by
observing how the intensity of the radiation diminishes. This
time, which is generally known as the "halflife" can vary between
thousands of millions of years (for uranium) down to fractions of
a second, and the determination of this period thus forms a major
means of defining the different radioactive elements. At first,
three series of these were known, of which two originated from
uranium, which is found as an oxide in the mineral pitchblende,
and the remaining one from thorium, a metal belonging to the
metals of the rare earths and whose oxide is used in the now
almost obsolete incandescent mantle for gas lighting. The total
number of these radioactive elements known in the early stages
and formed spontaneously amounted to just over forty.
As we know, the alchemists strove to transform the elements one
into another. Strictly speaking it was only one transformation of
this kind which interested them, the transformation of base
metals into gold and they were thus moved by purely venal
motives. Yet it cannot be said that the formation of new elements
in the way described above provides the solution to the
alchemists' problem, for the radioactive elements known earlier
appear and decompose spontaneously without it being possible in
any way to interfere in the process, and a particular element
cannot be transformed into another one by any artificial
interference.
It is in this respect that something new has been given to
science by the discoveries of Doctors Irène Joliot-Curie and
Frédéric Joliot, today's Nobel Prize winners. Yet even
this time it is not a question of the transformation of other
metals into gold - unless it be indirectly in the form of a Nobel
Prize! But it does concern the extremely interesting discovery
that it is possible in certain other cases to transform one
element into another by some external interference. I shall now
try to give an outline of these discoveries.
The spontaneous decomposition of a radioactive element can be
compared to an explosion, the radiation which is involved in it
consisting of the projection at high speed of particles charged
with electricity. One type of these particles, the so-called
alpha particles, consists of helium atoms with positive
electrical charges. I must also recall that according to the now
generally accepted view an atom is composed of a nucleus with a
positive electrical charge surrounded by a group of units of
negative electricity, the electrons, which can be compared to a
kind of planetary system round the nucleus. If an alpha particle
thus thrown out happens to strike such a nucleus, which is now
thought to be composed of a definite number of hydrogen nuclei
with positive charges, the so-called protons, and of an equally
definite number of neutrons (already mentioned this evening) -
that is to say, composed of the two kinds of matter which, with
the electrons, are at present considered to be the smallest
stones with which the universe is built - then it may happen that
the nucleus is shattered, a process by which atoms of other
elements are formed.
However, the nucleus is extremely small, so small that the
surface area of its cross-section forms only about one
hundred-thousandth part of the whole atom with its envelope of
electrons. This means that the number of effective collisions
during a bombardment is minute - it is calculated that one hit
occurs in ten million shots, that is out of ten million alpha
particles.
So the scientific couple Curie-Joliot bombarded aluminium with
alpha particles derived from polonium. Polonium, which is
somewhat akin to sulphur, is a radioactive element less stable
than radium and therefore it projects alpha particles in greater
numbers and at higher speeds than the same amount of radium, that
is, it yields a more effective radiation for atomic bombardment.
As it is also among the few radioactive elements obtainable in
reasonable quantity, it represents a good choice for this
purpose.
Having thus exposed aluminium to bombardment, today's
prize-winners found that after some minutes had elapsed the metal
began to emit rays to a noticeable degree - in this case units of
positive electricity, called positrons, discovered in the autumn
of 1932 by Carl Anderson at Pasadena. This was an indication of
the formation of a new radioactive element. And after ceasing the
bombardment, the emission of rays from the aluminium did not stop
immediately but continued for a while to a noticeable degree
until the radioactive element created was once more for the most
part decomposed in the usual manner. This was again an indication
of the formation of a new radioactive element.
More extensive investigation has shown that the newly formed
element is phosphorus in a new radioactive state,
radio-phosphorus. This is an isotope of ordinary phosphorus, that
is, its nucleus contains as many positive charges as normal
phosphorus, but its weight is different.
We have earlier indicated that, on account of their instability,
it has been impossible to obtain the unstable radioactive
elements, which form the majority, in reasonable quantities, so
that it has been impossible to examine them or even to
demonstrate their existence by chemical tests. In order to show
that they exist and determine their characteristics, it is
necessary to have recourse to the radiation emitted as I have
previously stated. In this particular case recognition by a
chemical method was successful in that it was possible to show
that following the decomposition of irradiated aluminium in an
acid, all the radioactivity was attached to the gas generated,
which is as would be expected if an isotope of phosphorus had
been formed, since gaseous phosphorus hydride would be produced.
Another chemical treatment of irradiated aluminium confirmed this
hypothesis.
In a similar way a new radio-nitrogen has been obtained from
boron, a constituent of boric acid, and radio-silicon and
radio-aluminium derived from two isotopes of the metal
magnesium.
In fact it is not the first time that the transformation of one
element into another by alpha-ray bombardment has been achieved,
for Lord Rutherford and others had by this means succeeded in
smashing the atoms of several elements, a process by which,
however, the elements formed were not new. One can thus
characterize the discovery of the couple Curie-Joliot as the
synthesis of new radioactive elements, even though the
term "synthesis" properly signifies the associating or combining
into a unity, and that previously the word was only used to
indicate the preparation of complex chemical compounds using
simpler ones or elements as the starting-point.
The field of investigation with which we are concerned today is
the object of intense activity and so the discovery of the
Curie-Joliot's, communicated to the French Academy of Sciences on
the 15th of January, 1934, was not long in stimulating other
scientists to take up this research. It must here be emphasized
that in the early stages, that is in April, 1934, the
Curie-Joliot's had suggested that projectiles suitable for the
disintegration of atoms were protons, deuterons (equivalent to
protons but coming from heavy hydrogen, the discovery of which
was rewarded last year by a Nobel Prize in Chemistry), and
neutrons. With Preiswerk they themselves used neutrons but it is
above all the Italian Fermi, who had already
used them with great success a little before the suggestion of
the Curie-Joliot's, and had arrived at a large number of
extremely interesting results.
But it is the first step which counts, as an eminent scientist
has rightly said in the letter in which he proposes the
Curie-Joliot's for the award of this year's Nobel Prize for
Chemistry.
There is hardly any need for me to add more on the importance of
their discovery to science. I simply want to recall that the
English scientist Boyle, to whom chemistry as much as physics
owes fundamental laws, in defining the notion of a chemical
element 250 years ago and in adopting for it the idea of the
Greek philosopher Democritus on the indivisible atom, taught in
500 B.C., nevertheless made a wise reservation. In fact he said
that perhaps someday it would be possible to find an agens
subtile et potens, that is a subtle and powerful means, by
whose aid elements might be decomposed. That vision into the
future is now realized by the discoveries of this year's Nobel
Prize winners for Chemistry and by those of other
scientists.
Have we by this reached the end of what might be called the world
of the infinitely small? Who knows, it is hardly likely. In fact,
it makes us, as we think about it, as dizzy in seeking to
penetrate to the bottom of what is infinitely small as it does to
make out the summit of that which is infinitely large.
But it is also possible even now to get a glimpse of practical
uses. Some of these artificial radioactive elements - for whose
production the raw materials, the ordinary elements, that is, are
available in large quantities compared with the minerals which in
the earlier stages were the sources of the radioactive elements -
emit a radiation known as gamma, a kind of X-rays, with a
definite wavelength, which is valuable for many purposes. Again,
in general the radioactive elements can only be obtained in small
quantities; but on the other hand the method of determining their
characteristics and their amount by observing their capacity for
making, by virtue of their radiation, air or other gases into
conductors of electricity, is so sensitive that it surpasses all
chemical methods. On this property is based the use of
radioactive elements as tracers - a method first described by
de Hevesy and Paneth. The
Curie-Joliot's have expressed the hope of being able very soon to
supply the physiologists with radioactive preparations,
containing, for example, radioactive carbon which after being
introduced into the body of an animal or plant makes it possible
to discover the movement and distribution of certain of the
substances in the organism. And referring to radio-sodium in
particular, obtained by Lawrence by bombarding
sodium with deuterons, which has a sufficiently long life, it is
to be hoped that it can be used in the same way as radium salts
in medical applications. Here also new effects can be expected
because of the difference of radium from the chemical point of
view and because no radioactive residue is formed on the decay of
the new radioactive elements.
Therefore the Royal Academy of Sciences has had no hesitation in
rewarding with the Nobel Prize for Chemistry the discovery which
I have sought to summarize; and in doing so the Academy has also
had the pleasure of being able to reward a discovery made at a
quite recent date, in complete accordance with the words of
Nobel's will - something which does not happen very often.
The Royal Academy of Sciences has therefore decided that the
Nobel Prize for Chemistry for this year should be shared equally
by the Doctors Irène Joliot-Curie and Frédéric
Joliot of Paris for their synthesis of new radioactive elements
carried out in partnership.
Madame, Sir. In awarding to both of you in
equal shares the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for this year, the
Royal Academy of Sciences has been pleased to be able to reward,
in a brilliant way, the synthesis, achieved by your united
efforts, of new radioactive elements.
Thanks to your discoveries, it has become possible, for the first
time, to transform artificially one element into another hitherto
unknown. At last the old dream of the alchemists has become
reality. Their main object, the production of gold, has been
attained, though by a path, it is true, less direct than they
thought would lead them there. The results of your researches are
of capital importance for pure science, but in addition,
physiologists, doctors, and the whole of suffering humanity hope
to gain from your discoveries, remedies of inestimable
value.
Madame, 24 years ago, your mother, Madame Marie Sklodowska-Curie,
was present at the Nobel festival in order to receive the
Chemistry Prize, as a reward for her discovery of radium in the
first place; and you, Madame, were also present on that occasion,
as a little girl.
Her husband, your father Pierre Curie, was already dead; but
earlier on, in 1903, he had shared with her, half the Physics
Prize, an award well deserved for their work on the phenomena of
radiation. In collaboration with your husband, you have worthily
maintained those brilliant traditions. The work of both of you,
Madame and Sir, has quickly attracted the attention of the
scientific world, and its importance has been amply and
universally recognized.
Madame Joliot-Curie, Monsieur Joliot. I ask you now to receive the prize which has been awarded to you, from the hands of His Majesty the King, who has graciously consented to present it to you.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1922-1941, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1966
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1935