Toulouse-Paris, édouard Privat, Tandou et Cie 1867 4 volumes. In-8 22 x 14 cm. Reliures éditeur demi-chagrin aubergine, dos à nerfs encadrés de petits fers à froid, V-652-664-856-701 pp., 1700 figures dans le texte, tables des matières, table alphabétique et analytique des matières contenues dans les quatre volumes. Rousseurs éparses, sinon exemplaires en très bon état.
Bon état d’occasion
Privat. 1863. In-8. Relié demi-cuir. Etat d'usage, Coins frottés, Dos frotté, Quelques rousseurs. 756 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 530-Physique
Classification Dewey : 530-Physique
Toulouse, Edouard Privat - Paris, F. Tandon, 1863. In-8 reliure 1/2 basane rouge, dos à 4 nerfs orné de filets dorés, VII-756 pp. (rousseurs). Avec 760 figures intercalées dans le texte.
Amsterdam, Henry Wetstein, 1688. Small 8vo. Contemp. full calf. Rebacked to style with raised bands. Corners renewed. Some scratches to covers. Engraved frontispiece (Schoonebeck, del. et sculp.) (10),139,(5) pp. and 35 engraved plates. A faint dampstain in upper part of the first ab. 50 leaves and first 7 plates, otherwise quite clean and printed on thick paper.
First edition of this beautifully illustrated work, depicting the different instruments in baroque interieurs and in pictorial landscapes, engraved by A. Schoonebeck. - ""The earliest account dealing exclusively with the subject, and especially valuable as the first work laying down rules for the graduation of the thermometer."" (Sotheran No. 929, note). - ""His detailed description of the principal meteorological instruments of the period is enriched with several new ideas, such as the calibration of the thermometric scale on the basis of two points of change of state: the point at which water freezes and - a much more contestable point - that at which butter melts."" (DSB). - Unknown to Poggendorff. - Wellcome II: p. 28.
Mayntz (Mainz), Ludwig Bourgeat, 1701. 8vo. Contemp. full calf. Raised bands gilt back. Back somewhat worn with cracks to leather at hinges. Small part of leather at covers gone. Corners bumped. (1. Theil:) Engraved frontispiece (dated 1694 Tractatus de Barometris Thermometris et Notiometris vel Higrometris). 80 pp. and 35 engraved plates. - (2. Theil:) Engraved frontispiece (dated 1697 Magne Tologia Curiosa). 77,(3) pp. and 33 engraved plates. Some light browning throughout (rather poor paperquality), first frontisp. and title a little frayed, first title partly mounted, a tear to last plate (no loss), one leaf loosing part of margin (no loss of letters)
Scarce second German edition of D'Alencé's two main works issued here under this joint title. It is translations of 1. ""Traittez des Barometres, Thermometrés etc."" from 1688 and ""Traitté de l'aiman..."" from 1687. The plates depict the different instruments and experiments in baroque interieurs and pictorial landscapes. The plates are copied from Schoonebeck's plate to the first edition.The work on Barometers, thermometers etc. ""(is) the earliest account dealing exclusively with the subject, and especially valuable as the first work laying rules for graduation of the thermometer.""(Sotheran No. 929, note) - ""His detailed description of the principal meteorological instruments of the period is enriched with several new ideas, such as the calibration of the thermometric scale on the basis of two points of change of state: the point at which water freezes and - a much more contestable point - that at which butter melts."" (DSB).The work on the magnet deals with all aspect of its effects and its uses, in compasses and navigation etc.( invention of the compass, magnetic mountains in America, declination, orientation of compass-needles in magnetic fields), and it sums up all the knowledge then known on the subject. The plates depicts magnetic experiments in pictorial landscapes. - Wellcome II:28 (not listing this joint edition). - Unknown to Poggendorff. - Weaver, Wheeler Gift: 200 (the first edition).
Privas, Imprimerie typographique de Roure, 1874 1 volume In-8° (14 x 22cm) Broché. 78p., 1 feuillet.
Peu courante plaquette du géologue du Vivarais Jean-Baptiste DALMAS (1811-1881), "auteur de "La Cosmogonie et la géologie basées sur les faits physiques, astronomiques", etc, etc", fondateur du Musée géologique de Privas en 1850, qui étudia volcans et tremblements de terre de la région: texte suivi de "Les tremblements de terre de la Drôme et de l'Ardèche" et de la "Réfutation" de l'auteur à "l'hypothèse qui [les] attribue [...] à une érosion souterraine de gypse et de sel gemme"; errata. Adresse différente en couverture: Paris, Savy, libraire, novembre 1874. Couverture salie, au dos déchiré avec petits manques et 1er plat.un peu endommagé, avec petits manques marginaux; intérieur propre.
Halle, Rengerschen Buchhandlung, 1803. Small 8vo. Without wrappers as extracted from ""Annalen der Physik. Herausgegeben von Ludwig Wilhelm Gilbert"", Bd. 12, 13 u. 15. Pp. 310-318 a. pp. 385-95 (Bd. 12) - pp. 438-45 (Bd. 13) - pp. 1-24 a. pp. 121-43.. With the 3 titlepages to the 3 volumes. Stamp on titles. Some scattered brownspots.
First German translations of these fundamental papers in which Dalton formulated his gas-and pressure laws, such as ""The Law of Partial Pressures"" , ""The Charles Law"" or The Charles-Gay-Lussac Law"" (this law arrived at almost simustaneously with Gay-Lussac).These papers were read and published in the memoires from the ""Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society"" in 1801 and 1802 in 4 parts, the German translation, the item offered, is divided in 5 parts, probably incorporating the paper from Nicholson's Journal from 1801. The publication of these papers gave him at once international reputation they tried to explain why the gases of the atmosphere remain mixed instead of segregating with the heaviest element at the bottom, it states that the maximum density of a vapour in contact with its liquid remains the same whether other gases be present or not and the vies that the particles of everykind of elastic fluid are elastic only with regard to their own kind. and that the otal pressure of the atmosphere equals the sum of the pressures exerted by the individual gases, each of which excerts its pressure independently of the others. This was the first step toward his atomic theory of in chemistry. - He also showed that the quantity of water evaporated in a given time to be stricktly proportional to the force of aqueous vapour at the same temperature, and last, announcing the law that all elastic fluids expands the same quantity by heat, ""The Charle's Law or Charles-Gay-Lussac Law"".
Paris, Fuchs, AN XI (1802). Extract from ""Annales de Chimie et de Physique, Par MM. Gay-Lussac et Arago."" tome 45. Titlepage to vol. 45. Pp. 103-107. Some even browning to titlepage.
First French edition of ""Experiments And observations on the heat and cold produced by the mechanical condensation and rarefication of air"" 1802. It is Daltons 4th paper and the first paper as secretary of the Royal Society. It ""Contained the understated but importent result that the temperature of air compressed to one-half its volume is raised 50 Degr.F'""(Smyth No. 28)..
Halle, Rengerschen Buchhandlung, 1803. Contemp. hcalf., Raised bands, gilt spine. Slightly rubbed. ""Annalen der Physik. Herausgegeben von Ludwig Wilhelm Gilbert"", Bd. 14. (8),512 pp. and 5 engraved plates. Small stamps on verso of titlepage and verso of plates. (Entire volume offered). Titlepage slightly brownspotted. A few scatterd brownspots. Dalton's papers: pp. 101-111, pp. 184-198, pp. 287-292 a. pp. 293-96.
First appearance in German of 4 importent early papers by Dalton (issued in English 1799, 1800 a.1803) - dealing with heat circulation (criticizing Rumford) and with air, its relations to temperature and pressures, announcing the importent observation, that the temperature of air compressed to one-half its volume is raised to 50 degrees Fahrenhait. ""Three papers that Dalton read to the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society in 1799 and 1800 (in which year he became the Society's secretary) show how much the question of water vapor continued to exercise him. In the first paper he discusse the balance in nature between rain, dew, river-water runoff, and evaporation. In the course of this discussion, he provided the earliest definition of the dew point. Then followed two competent, but more pedestrian, papers on heat, in which his firm belief in a fluid of heat is well-displayed and his complete acceptance of the particular caloric theory of William Irvine an Adair Crawford is apparent.""(DSB III, p.541). - Smyth No. 27, 28 a. 31 (German version).The volume contains otrher notable papers by Olbers ""Ueber die vom Himmel gefallnen Steinen"", Thomas Thomson (2 papers on the subject of ""heat of fluids""), Alex. Volta, Faujas-Saint-Fond etc.
Halle, Rengerschen Buchhandlung, 1803. Without wrappers as extracted from ""Annalen der Physik. Herausgegeben von Ludwig Wilhelm Gilbert"", Bd. 12. Pp. 310-318 a. pp. 385-395.
First German edition of both papers, constituting the first 2 papers in his ""Experimental Essays on the constitution of mixed gases...."" (1802) in which he formulated his famous gas laws and raised the foundation of the atomic theory in chemistry.The publication of these papers gave him at once international reputation they tried to explain why the gases of the atmosphere remain mixed instead of segregating with the heaviest element at the bottom, it states that the maximum density of a vapour in contact with its liquid remains the same whether other gases be present or not and the vies that the particles of everykind of elastic fluid are elastic only with regard to their own kind, and that the total pressure of the atmosphere equals the sum of the pressures exerted by the individual gases, each of which excerts its pressure independently of the others. This was the first step toward his atomic theory of in chemistry.
(Halle, Rengerschen Buchhandlung, 1803). Without wrappers as published in ""Annalen der Physik. Herausgegeben von Ludwig Wilhelm Gilbert"", Bd. 13, Viertes Stück. Pp. 385-504 a. 1 engraved plate. (The entire issue offered). Dalton's paper: pp. 438-445.
First German version of one of the founding papers in which he formulated his famous gas laws and raised the foundation of the atomic theory in chemistry.Smyth ""John Dalton... A Bibliography"", No 29.
P., Gauthier-Villars, 1923, un volume in 8, broché, couverture imprimée (couverture défraîchie, cachets de bibliothèque), 9pp., 118pp.
---- EDITION ORIGINALE ---- Les isotopes radioactifs - La démonstration directe du phénomène d'isotopie. Le terme final des filiations radioactives - Généralisation de la notion d'isotopie - La mesure directe des masses atomiques. La spectrographie de masse**1492/M5AR
Béranger, 1930 16 x 24,5, 477 pp., 129 figures, cartonné, éditeur, Bon état - 1 seul tome
bases scientifiques de la technique du chauffage - théorie des fours à chauffage direct et des fours à gaz - conduite et contrôle de la combustion
"DANBY, G. & J-M. GAILLARD & K. GOULIANOS & L. M. LEDERMAN & N. MISTRY & M. SCHWARTZ & J. STEINBERGER.
Reference : 43437
(1962)
(New York), American physical Society, 1962. Lex8vo. Volume 9, No. 1, July 1, 1962 of ""Physical Review Letters"", In the original printed blue wrappers. A very nice and clean copy externally as well as internally, near mint. Pp. 36-44. [Entire issue: (2), 46 pp].
First edition of this seminal paper in which the discovery of the muon neutrino was first announced. The muon neutrino is the second of the three neutrinos and it forms the second generation of leptons. Jack Steinberger, Leon Lederman and Melvin Schwartz were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in the year 1988, ""for the neutrino beam method and the demonstration of the doublet structure of the leptons through the discovery of the muon neutrino"". In 1934 Enrico Fermi had solved the major problem of beta decay: How do electrons come out of the nucleus if there are non to begin with? Pauli had named his proposed light particle a neutron. James Chadwick had named his much more massive nuclear particle a neutron as well which left the two particles with the same name. Fermi therefore, to solve the confusion, coined the term neutrino (Italian diminutive of neutron). Speculations in the early 1940ies were centered on whether it would be possible to find even smaller parts of an atom. ""The experiment used a beam of the AGS's energetic protons to produce a shower of pi mesons, which traveled 70 feet toward a 5,000-ton steel wall made of old battleship plates. On the way, they decayed into muons and neutrinos, but only the latter particles could pass through the wall into a neon-filled detector called a spark chamber. There, the impact of neutrinos on aluminum plates produced muon spark trails that could be detected and photographed -- proving the existence of muon-neutrinos. The experiment's use of the first-ever neutrino beam paved the way for scientists to use these particles in research at the AGS and around the world.""(Nobel Prize, Brookhaven National Laboratory) ""Following the discovery of a second neutrino associated with the muon - the Muon neutrino - at Brookhaven in 1962 by L. Lederman, M. Schwartz, J. Steinberger, and collaborators, a new neutrino program was started in CERN in 1963. Using a spark chamber set-up and a heavy liquid bubble chamber exposed to the new high quality neutrino beam the discovery was confirmed with high statistics"". (Krige, John. History of CERN, 1996, p. 433).
"(DANIEL, GABRIEL). - AN IMAGINARY TRAVEL IN THE CARTESIAN WORLD.
Reference : 36324
(1694)
Amsterdam, Abraham Wolfgang, 1694. Uncut in contemp. blank boards. Title handwritten on spine. Spine a little rubbed. (22),307 pp. and (8),159 pp. Textillustrations in woodcut illustrating Cartesian physics and world system. A large copy, few marginal brownspots. Previous owners name on fly-leaf, Vilhelm Maar, Danish historian of medicine.
First Latin edition (The French original from 1690 Voyage du Monde de Descartes) of this imaginary travel to find Descartes on the moon and in the upper spheres. The work is one of the most importent anti-Cartesian polemics of the 1690's and it attacs the whole of Descartes system in a satirical way.""It aimes principally at the sharp Cartesian distinction between body and soul, related in a satirical fashion the voyage of the disembodied souls of the narrator, of Mersanne, and of another old friend of Descartes in the upper spheres. On their way to visit Descartes in the third heaven, they meet the souls of Aristotle and the disciples of descartes (clearly refelcting here the philosophical opinions of Gabriel Daniel himself). One of the articles of that treaty stipulates that the Cartesians will refer to Aristotle with more respect, whereas the Aristotelians will refrain from calling Descartes ""Enthusiast"", ""Madman"", ""Heretick"" or ""Atheist"" - all of these evidently labels commonly used by the opponents of Descartes at that time."" (Michael Heyd in ""Be Sober and Reasonable""). The work was published anonymous and earlier sometimes attributed to Daniel Defoe. -
(London, Richard and John E. Taylor, 1839). 4to. No wrappers as extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"" 1839 - Part I. Pp. 89-95. Clean and fine.
First printing of an importent paper in which Daniell further records his experiments with his invention the ""Daniell Cell"" from 1836. ""The use of such cells, often coupled together in long chains to give a large electromotive force, gave great impetus to research in all branches of current electricity and also lead to commercial applications in gilding, electroplating, and glyphography.""(DSB III, p. 557)In 1831 Daniell was appointed proffesor of Chemistry at King's College London. He invented several scientific instruments, including a hygrometer for measuring humidity he is best known for his work in electrochemistry, his interests having been aroused by the work of his good friend faraday. Volta's battery had the defect of rapid diminution in current. What was needed, however, was a battery yielding a constant current over a considerable lenght of time. In 1836 Daniell succeeded, producing the Daniell cell, of copper and zinc. his was the first reliable source of electric current.
(London, Richard and John E. Taylor, 1839 a. 1840). 4to. No wrappers as extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"" 1839 - Part I. Pp. 97-112. One textillustr. And !840 - Part I. Pp. 209-224.
First printing of 2 importent paper in which the inventor of the ""Daniell Cell"" records his experiments with the strong battery on electrolysis of some compounds.""The use of such cells, often coupled together in long chains to give a large electromotive force, gave great impetus to research in all branches of current electricity and also lead to commercial applications in gilding, electroplating, and glyphography."" (DSB III, p. 557).In 1831 Daniell was appointed profesor of Chemistry at King's College London. He invented several scientific instruments, including a hygrometer for measuring humidity he is best known for his work in electrochemistry, his interests having been aroused by the work of his good friend faraday. Volta's battery had the defect of rapid diminution in current. What was needed, however, was a battery yielding a constant current over a considerable lenght of time. In 1836 Daniell succeeded, producing the Daniell cell, of copper and zinc. his was the first reliable source of electric current.
London, Richard Taylor, 1836. 4to. No wrappers as extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"" 1836 - Part I. Pp.107-124 and 1 engraved plate. + Pp. 125-129 and 1 engraved plate. Both plates with a dampstain in upper part, not reaching the image. With titlepage to Part I of theTransacti
First appearance of Daniell's first paper on the construction of the famous ""Daniell-Cell"", in which he announced his invention of the battery, THE FIRST RELIABLE SOURCE OF AN ELECTRIC CURRENT. In the new invention by Charles Wheatstone of the electric telegraph in 1837, the Daniell cell was used as the electric source.In 1831 Daniell was appointed profesor of Chemistry at King's College London. He invented several scientific instruments, including a hygrometer for measuring humidity he is best known for his work in electrochemistry, his interests having been aroused by the work of his good friend Faraday. Volta's battery had the defect of rapid diminution in current. What was needed, however, was a battery yielding a constant current over a considerable lenght of time. In 1836 Daniell succeeded, producing the Daniell cell, of copper and zinc. his was the first reliable source of electric current.Parkinson ""Breakthroughs"" 1836 P.
Julliard, 1966. Format 14x21 cm, reliure editeur, sans jaquette, 283 pages. Bon etat.
P., Julliard, 1966, un volume in 8 relié en cartonnage éditeur, 283pp.
---- PREMIERE EDITION FRANCAISE ---- "Ce livre est la passionnante aventure que l'auteur a vécu au sein du monde étrange des particules élémentaires, bases de la matière. Il fait entrevoir au lecteur un domaine où se mêlent l'étrange et l'imprévu de la physique" ---- Des erreurs millénaires qu'il ne faut pas mépriser - On ne peut pas arrêter la lumière ; réflexions bizarres du lycéen Einstein - Le miroir de pierre des Aztèques - Le second manuscrit d'Einstein - Les micro-centaures - Romantique sans romantisme - Une absence de preuve est pleine de signification - Une demi-heure après la naissance d'un noyau - Le bon sens de Rutherford - La mécanique quantique et la religion - Kiev été 1959 - ETC**1499/L5DEP
Paris, Editions Julliard, 1966. Hardcover in-8°, 283 pages, cartonnage editeur, jaquette illustree.
Bon état. [MI-12] Le best-seller sovietique sur l'histoire de la Physique moderne.
P., Dunod, 1958, un volume in 8 relié en cartonnage éditeur, 14pp., 257pp.
---- EDITION ORIGINALE ---- "LE PREMIER OUVRAGE EN LANGUE FRANCAISE TRAITANT METHODIQUEMENT DU SUJET" ---- Le calcul mécanique - Principes du computage électrique - Organes et précision du computeur - Résolution des systèmes algébriques linéaires - Systèmes différentiels linéaires - Le langage opérationnel et les opérateurs composés - Le calcul non linéaire - Computeurs et calculateurs spéciaux - Domaine et pratique du calcul analogique**7086/N5DE
Strasbourg, Durand Neveu, 1777. Bound in 2 contemp. full sprinkled calf. Gilt spines. Titlelabels with gilt lettering. A paperlabel pasted on top of spines. Light wear to top of spine on vol. I. Stamps on title-pages. XII,(2),344(4),314,(2) pp. and 21 folded engraved plates. Some brownspots to title-pages, otherwise clean.
First French edition. - Poggendorff I, 51.
ELLIPSES. 1991. In-4. Broché. Etat d'usage, Coins frottés, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 412 pages illustrées de nombreuses figures dans le texte - 1er plat illustré en couleurs.. . . . Classification Dewey : 530-Physique
Classification Dewey : 530-Physique
P., Boudet, 1768, un volume in 4, (3), 91pp., 7 PLANCHES dépliantes, plein veau marbré, tranches rouges, dos orné de fers dorés (reliure de l'époque), (coins très légèrement émoussés).
---- L'EXEMPLAIRE DE Joseph FARCOT, PERE DU GOUVERNAIL ASSISTE ---- EDITION ORIGINALE ---- BON EXEMPLAIRE BIEN COMPLET - Conforme à l'exemplaire de la Bibliothèque du CNAM ---- EXEMPLAIRE AYANT APPARTENU SUCCESSIVEMENT A BERTIER DE SAUVIGNY, Conseiller d'Etat et à Joseph FARCOT, l'inventeur d'un régulateur isochrone à bras et bielles croisés et surtout du servomoteur ou moteur asservi**1522/ARM3