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1958 Greeting Card featuring the photograph Chien-shiung Wu, Chinese-american #1 by Science Source

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Chien-shiung Wu, Chinese-american #1 Greeting Card

Science Source

by Science Source

$6.95

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Our greeting cards are 5" x 7" in size and are produced on digital offset printers using 100 lb. paper stock. Each card is coated with a UV protectant on the outside surface which produces a semi-gloss finish. The inside of each card has a matte white finish and can be customized with your own message up to 500 characters in length. Each card comes with a white envelope for mailing or gift giving.

Design Details

Chien-Shiung Wu (May 31, 1912 - February 16, 1997) was a Chinese-American physicist. Wu became a faculty member at Smith College, then Princeton... more

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Greeting Card Tags

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Artist's Description

Chien-Shiung Wu (May 31, 1912 - February 16, 1997) was a Chinese-American physicist. Wu became a faculty member at Smith College, then Princeton University and finally at Columbia University in New York City, beginning in 1944 and continuing for many years after the war, all the way through 1980. Wu worked on the Manhattan Project (she helped to develop the process for separating uranium metal into the U-235 and U-238 isotopes by gaseous diffusion). In 1956, Wu and Tsung-Dao Lee experimentally confirmed a theory that parity is violated during weak radioactive decay, overturning many basic assumptions of particle physics. Wu experimentally confirmed other particle theories, as well as studying muonic atom X-ray spectra. She later performed experiments that contradicted the Law of Conservation of Parity and which confirmed the theories of colleagues. Her honorary nicknames include the First Lady of Physics, and the Chinese Marie Curie. She was the first living scientist to have an astero...

 

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