Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Curie> ?p ?o }
- Curie abstract "The curie (symbol Ci) is a non-SI unit of radioactivity, named after Pierre Curie, but probably also after Marie Curie.It was originally defined as 'the quantity or mass of radium emanation in equilibrium with one gram of radium (element)' but is currently defined as: 1 Ci = 3.7 × 1010 decays per second after more accurate measurements of the activity of 226Ra (which has a specific activity of 3.66 x 1010 Bq/g.)In 1975 the General Conference on Weights and Measures gave the becquerel (Bq), equal to one reciprocal second, official status as the SI unit of activity. Therefore: 1 Ci = 3.7 × 1010 Bq = 37 GBq and 1 Bq ≅ 2.703 × 10−11 Ci ≅ 27 pCiWhile its continued use is discouraged by NIST and other bodies, the curie is still widely used throughout the government, industry and medicine in the United States and in other countries.The curie is a large amount of activity, and was intentionally so. According to Bertram Boltwood, Marie Curie thought that 'the use of the name "curie" for so infinitesimally small (a) quantity of anything was altogether inappropriate.'The typical human body contains roughly 0.1 μCi (14 mg) of naturally occurring potassium-40. A human body containing 16 kg of carbon (see Composition of the human body) would also have about 24 nanograms or 0.1 μCi of carbon-14. Together, these would have an activity of approximately 0.2 μCi or 7400 Bq inside the person's body.".
- Curie wikiPageID "155829".
- Curie wikiPageLength "7288".
- Curie wikiPageOutDegree "57".
- Curie wikiPageRevisionID "677873693".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Acute_radiation_syndrome.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Americium-241.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Atomic_mass.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Avogadro_constant.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Avogadros_number.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Becquerel.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Caesium-137.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Carbon-14.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Category:Non-SI_metric_units.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Category:Radioactivity.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Category:Units_of_radioactivity.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Cobalt-60.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Composition_of_the_human_body.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Erg.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Exponential_decay.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Geiger_counter.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Gray_(unit).
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink International_System_of_Units.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Iodine-123.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Iodine-129.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Iodine-131.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Ionizing_radiation.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Isotopes_of_americium.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Isotopes_of_polonium.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Isotopes_of_radium.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Isotopes_of_thorium.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Marie_Curie.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Pierre_Curie.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Plutonium-238.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Plutonium-239.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Plutonium-240.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Plutonium-241.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Polonium-210.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Potassium-40.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Rad_(unit).
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Radiation_burn.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Radiation_exposure.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Radiation_exposure_(disambiguation).
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Radiation_poisoning.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Radioactive_decay.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Radionuclide.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Radium.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Radium-226.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Radon.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Roentgen_(unit).
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Roentgen_equivalent_man.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Second.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Sievert.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Specific_activity.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Strontium-90.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Technetium-99.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Thorium-232.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Tritium.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink United_Nations_Scientific_Committee_on_the_Effects_of_Atomic_Radiation.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Uranium-235.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLink Uranium-238.
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "C".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ci".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ci/g".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "Curie".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "MCi".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nanocurie".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "curie".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "kilocuries".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "megacuries".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "microcurie".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "microcuries".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "millicurie".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "millicuries".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "nCi".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "nanocuries".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "pCi".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "picocurie".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "picocuries".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "µCi".
- Curie wikiPageWikiLinkText "μCi".
- Curie hasPhotoCollection Curie.
- Curie wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Other_uses.
- Curie wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Curie wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Val.
- Curie subject Category:Non-SI_metric_units.
- Curie subject Category:Radioactivity.
- Curie subject Category:Units_of_radioactivity.
- Curie hypernym Unit.
- Curie type Organisation.
- Curie type Physic.
- Curie type Unit.
- Curie type Thing.
- Curie comment "The curie (symbol Ci) is a non-SI unit of radioactivity, named after Pierre Curie, but probably also after Marie Curie.It was originally defined as 'the quantity or mass of radium emanation in equilibrium with one gram of radium (element)' but is currently defined as: 1 Ci = 3.7 × 1010 decays per second after more accurate measurements of the activity of 226Ra (which has a specific activity of 3.66 x 1010 Bq/g.)In 1975 the General Conference on Weights and Measures gave the becquerel (Bq), equal to one reciprocal second, official status as the SI unit of activity. ".
- Curie label "Curie".
- Curie sameAs كوري_(وحدة).
- Curie sameAs Кюры,_адзінка_вымярэння.
- Curie sameAs Кюри.
- Curie sameAs Curie_(unitat).
- Curie sameAs Curie.