Georges Charpak was born on 1 August 1924 to
Jewish parents, Chana (Szapiro) and Maurice Charpak, in the village of Dąbrowica in
Poland (now
Dubrovytsia in
Ukraine). Charpak's family moved from
Poland to
Paris when he was seven years old, beginning his study of mathematics in 1941 at the
Lycée Saint-Louis. The actor and film director
André Charpak was his younger brother. During
World War II Charpak served in the
resistance and was imprisoned by
Vichy authorities in 1943. In 1944 he was deported to the
Nazi concentration camp at
Dachau, where he remained until the camp was liberated in 1945. After
classes préparatoires studies at
Lycée Saint-Louis in Paris and later at
Lycée Joffre in Montpellier, he joined in 1945 the Paris-based
École des Mines, one of the most prestigious engineering schools in France. The following year he became a naturalized French citizen. He graduated in 1948, earning the French degree of
Civil Engineer of Mines (
Ingénieur Civil des Mines equivalent to a
Master's degree) becoming a pupil in the laboratory of
Frédéric Joliot-Curie at the
Collège de France during 1949, the year after Curie had directed construction of the first
atomic pile within France. While at the Collège, Charpak secured a research position in
nuclear physics at the Collège de France, receiving the qualification after having written a thesis on the subject of very-low-energy radiation due to disintegration of nuclei (Charpak & Suzor). He remained politically engaged: in 1972, together with
Daniele Amati, he launched a petition against the Vietnam War. Several years later, he initiated the
Juri Orlow Committee to protest the imprisonment of the human rights activist in the former Soviet Union. Charpak married Dominique Vidal in 1953. They had three children. The pediatrician
Nathalie Charpak (born 1955) is his daughter. Charpak died on 29 September 2010, in
Paris, at the age of 86. == Scientific achievements ==