‎SINGER (Isaac Bashevis).‎
‎Nobel Lecture.‎

‎ London. Jonathan Cape, 1979. Plaquette in-12 br. Plaquette en anglais composée du discours de Singer lors de la remise du Prix Nobel, du discours d'hommage à Singer par L. Gyllensten et du texte de Singer : Why I Write for Children. E.O.‎

Reference : 21476


‎‎

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3 book(s) with the same title

‎"BECQUEREL, HENRI.‎

Reference : 38047

(1905)

‎Sur Une Propriété Nouvelle De La Matière, La Radio-Active. Les Prix Nobel En 1903. - [BECQUEREL'S NOBEL LECTURE]‎

‎Stockholm: P.-A. Norstedt & Fils, 1905. Large 8vo. (246x166mm). Original printed wrappers.‎


‎First edition of Becquerel's Nobel Lecture.""Becquerel attended a session of the 'Académie des Sciences' in Paris on 20 January 1896, when Jules Henri Poincaré exhibited a series of radiographs sent to him by Röntgen. He, like others, observed that the emission of X-rays from the cathode tube was accompanied by strong phosphorescence of the glass. He therefore suspected that other forms of induced phosphorescence might be accompanied by other hithero unknown rays. In February 1896 Charles Henry reported to the 'Académie' his discovery of that phosphorescence could be induced in certain substances by exposure to sunlight. In the same month Becquerel reported that uranium was among these substances. Like all his other early papers on the subject, this appeared in the 'Comptes rendus' and was entitled 'Sur les Radiations Invisibles' émises par les Corps Phosphorescents'. In a second paper, 'Sur quelques Propriétés Nouvelles des Radiations Invisibles', he reported the astonishing fact that uranium was capable of fogging photographic plates even without previous exposure to sunlight and when the plates themselves were completely protected from ordinary light. In a third paper, March 1896, 'Sur les Radiations invisbles émises par les d'Uranium' Becquerel discarded phosphorescence completely and declared that the emanations from uranium constituded an entirely new and unsuspected property of matter, which in his seventh paper he named 'radioactivité'. He also found that the uranium rays discharged a gold-leaf electroscope, which is still used as one method of detecting radio-activity.Becquerel also discovered that the residue of pitchblende, a natural uranium oxide, after the uranium had been extracted from it was about four times as radio-active as uranium itself. He therefore suggested to the Curies the importance of further investigations of the ore, with the result that they discovered radium. He continued to work on the subject until 1903, in which year he collaborated with Pierre Curie in a paper, 'Action Physiologique des Rayons du Radium', which is the starting-point of the treatment of disease by radio-active substances. In that year he also published ... ('Recherches sur une Propriété Nouvelle de la Matière' - the offered item) ... which is his definitive work, containing a chronological narrative of his investigations, his mature conclusions and a bibliography of two hundred and fourteen treatises on radio-activity, dating from his own first paper in 1896. The rays emitted by uranium were named in his honour 'Becquerel' rays. They were later discovered to be a composite of three forms of emanation, distinguished by Rutherford (in 1919) as alpha, beta and gamma rays and identified thus: alpha as helium nuclei, beta as electrons, and gamma as powerful X-rays."" - (PMM).In 1903 Becquerel shared the Nobel Prize in Physics with the Curies ""in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by his discovery of spontaneous radioactivity"". ‎

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Phone number : +45 33 155 335

DKK7,500.00 (€1,005.91 )

‎"TINBERGEN, NIKOLAAS.‎

Reference : 43899

(1974)

‎Ethology and Stress Diseases. Nobel Lecture. [Reimpression de Les prix Nobel en 1973]. - [NIKOLAAS TINBERGEN - PRESENTATION COPY]‎

‎Stockholm, P. A. Norstedt & Söner, 1974. 8vo. Original red wrappers. Previous owner's name [Frank Mckinley]. to front free end-paper. A very nice and clean copy. 197-218 pp.‎


‎First publication of Tinbergen's Nobel speech, in the off-print with presentation-inscription from Tinbergen to front wrapper: ""To Frank - with many thanks for your / ecovative Delta pictures! / Niko"".In 1973 Tinbergen shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine with Karl von Frisch and Konrad Lorenz ""for their discoveries concerning organization and elicitation of individual and social behaviour patterns"".Frank McKinley, to whom the offprint is inscribed and who has written his name on the front free end-paper was a post-doctorate student who studied under Tinbergen. McKinley later became curator of Ethnology and professor in the deparment of Ecology, Evolution & Behavior at the University of Minnesota. McKinley was not the only successful student under Tinbergen"" Richard Dawkins, Marian Dawkins and Desmond Morris all became prominent biologists under the guidance of Tinbergen. Tinbergen is known for ""Tinbergen's four questions"" which he believed should be asked of any animal behaviour. The questions relate to function, phylogeny, causation and development and this approach has had immense influence in almost all branches of biology. ‎

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Phone number : +45 33 155 335

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‎Vargas Llosa ( Mario )‎

Reference : 71331

ISBN : 9782070135325

‎Eloge de la lecture et de la fiction, conférence du Nobel‎

‎Gallimard 2015, in-12 broché, 50pp; traduction de Albert Bensoussan - très bon état‎


Librairie Alpha - Romans sur Isère

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