Topics

Particle physics proves that arsenic didn’t kill Napoleon

16 April 2008

A meticulous new examination performed at the INFN laboratories in Milano-Bicocca and Pavia in Italy has shown that arsenic poisoning did not kill Napoleon. The researchers demonstrated that there is no evidence of a significant increase in the levels of arsenic in the emperor’s hair during the final period of his life.

Physicists performed the study using a small nuclear reactor located at the university in Pavia, which was built for the Cryogenic Underground Observatory for Rare Events (Cuore) experiment. Currently in development at the INFN’s National Laboratories in Gran Sasso, the completed Cuore facility will be the most advanced experiment for studying the rare phenomenon of neutrinoless double-beta decay and for measuring neutrino mass.

To examine Napoleon’s hair, the team used the technique of neutron activation, which has two important advantages: it does not destroy the sample and it provides extremely precise results, even from samples with a small mass. The researchers placed Napoleon’s hair in the core of the nuclear reactor in Pavia and used neutron activation to establish that all of the hair samples contained traces of arsenic. They chose to test for arsenic in particular because various historians have hypothesized that guards poisoned Napoleon during his imprisonment in Saint Helena. A diverse sample of hairs from different periods of Napoleon’s life were examined, along with hair samples from people living today, to compare arsenic levels.

The examination produced some surprising results. First, the level of arsenic in all of the hair samples from 200 years ago is 100 times as great as the average level detected in samples from people living today. In other words, people at the beginning of the 19th century evidently ingested arsenic from the environment in quantities that are today considered dangerous. The other surprise is that there was no significant difference in arsenic levels between when Napoleon was a boy and during his final days in Saint Helena. According to the toxicologists who participated in the study, this provides evidence that this was not a case of poisoning, but rather the result of a lifetime’s absorption of arsenic.

CERN Courier Jobs

Events

  • Accelerators | Conference LHCP 2025 5—9 May 2025 | Taipei City, Taiwan

  • Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type null in /opt/app-root/src/wp-content/themes/iopp/modules/bright-recruits-item-events.php on line 36
    |
    Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /opt/app-root/src/wp-content/themes/iopp/modules/bright-recruits-item-events.php on line 36

    Warning: Attempt to read property "name" on null in /opt/app-root/src/wp-content/themes/iopp/modules/bright-recruits-item-events.php on line 36
    Sustainable HEP 2025 12—15 May 2025 | Online
  • Astrophysics and cosmology | Conference PLANCK 2025 26—30 May 2025 | Padua, Italy
bright-rec iop pub iop-science physcis connect