On This Day 1968, Lise
Meitner, born November 7, 1878, Vienna, Austria-Hungary [now
in Austria] died.
Austrian-born physicist who shared the Enrico Fermi Award
(1966) with the chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann for
their joint research that led to the discovery of uranium fission.
After receiving her doctorate at the University of Vienna (1906),
Meitner attended Max Planck’s lectures
at Berlin in 1907 and joined Hahn in research on radioactivity.
During three decades of association, she and Hahn were among the first to
isolate the isotope protactinium–231 (which they
named), studied nuclear isomerism and beta decay,
and in the 1930s (along with Strassmann) investigated the products of neutron bombardment
of uranium.
Because she was Jewish, she left Nazi Germany in
the summer of 1938 to settle in Sweden.
Lise Meitner and Otto
Hahn
Physicist Lise Meitner and chemist Otto Hahn at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of
Chemistry, Berlin-Dahlem, Germany, 1913.
National Archives, Washington, D.C.
After Hahn and Strassmann had demonstrated that barium appears in neutron-bombarded uranium, Meitner, with her nephew Otto Frisch, elucidated the physical characteristics of this division and in January 1939 proposed the term fission (which Frisch elicited from American biophysicist William Arnold) for the process. In 1944 Hahn received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry for discovering nuclear fission, though some have argued that Meitner merited a share of the award. During this time she was invited to work on the Manhattan Project (1942–45) in the United States. Meitner opposed the atomic bomb, however, and she rejected the offer.
She retired to England in 1960. Eight years later she died, and her tombstone bears the inscription “A physicist who never lost her humanity.” The chemical element meitnerium was later named in her honour.
Photos and info via
Brittanica
Source: OTD – Scents of Science
(myfusimotors.com)
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