Ellipses 2002 Epuise chez l’éditeur. Bon état d’occasion sans gros défauts.
Bon état d’occasion
Ellipses. 2002. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 240 pages. Illustré de nombreux dessins et graphiques en noir et blanc dans le texte. Légères pliures.. . . . Classification Dewey : 530-Physique
'La Physique pour tous'. Classification Dewey : 530-Physique
Bulletin de la Société Mathématique de France Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1924 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché, sous couverture imprimée éditeur grand In-8 1 vol. - 6 pages
exemplaire augmenté d'un envoi autographe de l'auteur
Moscou, Editions en Langues Etrangères, 1959. 13 x 20, 176 pp., 49 figures, broché, très bon état.
London, Macmillan & Co, 1896-97. Royal8vo. Bound in contemporary half calf with gilt lettering to spine. In ""Nature"", Vol. 55, November 1896 - April 1897. Bookplates to front free end-papers and library stamp to title page. Minor wear to extremities, otherwise very fine and clean. P. 347. [Entire volume: XL, 624 pp.].
First English edition of this landmark paper in which the Zeeman-effect was first announced. It is one of the most important and influential discoveries made in the later half of the 19th century. ""The Zeemann effect not only opened a new world of facts which interest the physicist, the chemist, and even the astronomer, but the study also contributed - to an extent much greater than the study of the Stark effect - to the conceptual development of quantum theory"" (Jammer). Together with Lorenz, Zeeman was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for ""the extraordinary service they rendered by their researches into the influence of magnetism upon radiation phenomena"". ""The last experiment performed by Michael Faraday was an unsuccessful attempt to observe the influence of a magnetic field on the spectral lines of sodium. More than 30 years later, Pieter Zeeman took up the challenge and observed a broadening of the lines, which was soon recognized to be the splitting that we know as the Zeeman effect. Zeeman's account of the discovery, translated for Nature from the Proceedings of the Physical Society of Berlin, includes an interpretation based on Hendrik Lorentz's idea of ""small molecular elements charged with electricity"", and a rough calculation of the charge to mass ratio of these ""ions""."" (Nature Physics Portal).""Zeeman is best remembered for his observations in 1896 of the mageto-optic phenomenon that almost immediately was named the Zeeman effect. His experimental discovery was not fortuitous, but the fruition of theoretical views that had motivated attempts over a span of thirty-five years to detect some such interaction between magnetism and light. Zeeman's initial observations were beautifully comprehended by H.A.Lorentz' electromagnetic theory, which also served to guide Zeeman in the very early refinement and extension of his discovery. As a result Zeeman and Lorentz shared the 1902 Nobel Prize for physics in recognition of their accomplishment and of the promise, since overwhelmingly fulfilled, of the Zeeman effect for contributing to the understanding of spectra and the particulate structure of matter."" (DSB).
London, Macmillan & Co, 1896-97. Royal8vo. Bound in later half cloth with gilt lettering to spine. In ""Nature"", Vol. 55, November 1896 - April 1897. Bookplates to front free end-papers and library stamp to title page. Minor wear to extremities, otherwise very fine and clean. P. 347. [Entire volume: XL, 624 pp.].
First English edition of this landmark paper in which the Zeeman-effect was first announced. It is one of the most important and influential discoveries made in the later half of the 19th century. ""The Zeemann effect not only opened a new world of facts which interest the physicist, the chemist, and even the astronomer, but the study also contributed - to an extent much greater than the study of the Stark effect - to the conceptual development of quantum theory"" (Jammer). Together with Lorenz, Zeeman was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for ""the extraordinary service they rendered by their researches into the influence of magnetism upon radiation phenomena"". ""The last experiment performed by Michael Faraday was an unsuccessful attempt to observe the influence of a magnetic field on the spectral lines of sodium. More than 30 years later, Pieter Zeeman took up the challenge and observed a broadening of the lines, which was soon recognized to be the splitting that we know as the Zeeman effect. Zeeman's account of the discovery, translated for Nature from the Proceedings of the Physical Society of Berlin, includes an interpretation based on Hendrik Lorentz's idea of ""small molecular elements charged with electricity"", and a rough calculation of the charge to mass ratio of these ""ions""."" (Nature Physics Portal).""Zeeman is best remembered for his observations in 1896 of the mageto-optic phenomenon that almost immediately was named the Zeeman effect. His experimental discovery was not fortuitous, but the fruition of theoretical views that had motivated attempts over a span of thirty-five years to detect some such interaction between magnetism and light. Zeeman's initial observations were beautifully comprehended by H.A.Lorentz' electromagnetic theory, which also served to guide Zeeman in the very early refinement and extension of his discovery. As a result Zeeman and Lorentz shared the 1902 Nobel Prize for physics in recognition of their accomplishment and of the promise, since overwhelmingly fulfilled, of the Zeeman effect for contributing to the understanding of spectra and the particulate structure of matter."" (DSB).
(Paris, Gauthier-Villars), 1897. 4to. No wrappers. In: ""Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences"", Tome 124, No 25. Pp. (1407-) 1486. (Entire issue offered). Zeeman's paper: pp. 1444-1445.
First French version of this importent paper in which Zeeman observed for the first time the splitting of the spectral lines into doublets and triplets. Here we have the first appearance of a charged particle much lighter than an atom, the first glimpse at the electron.""In the spring of 1897, after his move to the University of Amsterdam, Zeeman resolved a magnetically ""broadened"" spectral line into the triplet of distinct polarized components that the Lorentz theory predicted for a sufficiently intense magnetic field. This in a very real sense was the peak of the Zeeman-Lorentz investigation of the Zeeman effect.""(DSB).
"ZEEMAN, PIETER (+) R. SISSINGH. - THE KERR-EFFECT INVESTIGATED, THE PHD THESIS.
Reference : 44752
(1894)
Harlem, Les Heritieres Loosjes, 1894. Lex8vo. Orig. printed wrappers. Wrapper frayed at edges loosing some small pieces. A faint stamp on frontwrapper. In ""Archives Néerlandaises des Science Exactes et Naturelles. Redigée par J. Bosscha"", Tome XXVII. (Entire volume offered). VIII,438 pp. and 7 lithographed plates. Zeeman's paper: pp. 252-302. Sissingh's paper: pp. 173-251. Uncut and unopened.
First edition of Zeeman's PhD by which he furthermore won the gold medal of the Netherlands Scientific Society of Haarlem in 1892 .In 1902 Lorentz and Zeeman shared the Nobel Prize in physics.
Tübingen, H. Laupp, 1933, in-8vo, 76 S., ‘Mr. Prof. Dr. M. Lugeron. Hommage ms. de l'auteur’ auf dem Titelbl., Original-Broschüre.
Aus Vorlesungen, gehalten im Sommersemester 1932 und Wintersemester 1932/33 an der Universität Basel, wo Ludwig Zehnder Prof. der Physik war.
Phone number : 41 (0)26 3223808
1906 Paris, 1906, grand in 8° relié pleine percaline verte de l'éditeur, 114 pages ; nombreuses figures.
Bel exemplaire. ...................... Photos sur demande ..........................
Phone number : 04 77 32 63 69
BON EXEMPLAIRE
In 4° (215 x 270 mm) Cartonnage éditeur, manque dos CXXVIII pp – 444 pp Illustré de 4 planches H.T. In fine
Traduit de l'anglais par MALGORN G. In 8° demi percale, 6pp, 177pp, figures dans le texte Première édition française Zworykin, ingénieur américain d'origine russe (1889-1982) fut l'assistant de Boris ROSING qu'il aida dans ses expériences de télévision cathodique. Puis il entreprit à Paris, au Collège de France, des recherches sur les rayons X sous la direction de Paul LANGEVIN. En 1919, il s'installa aux Etats unis. En 1929, il entre à la Radio Corporation of America dont il devint directeur des recherches. Zworykin est l'inventeur , en 1934, de l'iconoscope, le premier d'une longue lignée de tubes électroniques analyseurs d'image qui feront faire à la télévision des progrès considérables. Introduction historique- théorie générale ( énergie radiante, effet photo-émissif)- Caractéristiques mécaniques- Méthodes générales de préparation des cellules photo-voltaïques- Le circuit de la photocellule et le radio-tube- Le problème d'amplification- La photocellule et le cinéma sonore- La photocellule et la transmission des images- La photocellule et la télévision- Applications diverses- Les photocellules dans l'avenir.
Leipzig, 1876, in-8vo, 3 Bl. + S. (59)-239 + 3 lith. (1 gef.) Figurentafeln (Apparate und Versuche), Original-Broschüre, Bibl.-Stempel auf Umschlag.
Separat-Abdruck aus den Berichten der Königl. Sächs. Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig. Sitzung am 12. Febr. 1876.Zöllner war Prof. der Physikal. Astronomie in Leipzig und einer der Pioniere der Astrophysik. DSB XIV/627-630; Poggendorff III/1488-1489, IV/1694.
Phone number : 41 (0)26 3223808
(Upsal, C.A. Leffler, 1860). 4to. Orig. printed wrappers. Extracted from ""Actes de la Soc. Roy. des Sciences d'Upsala"", Series 3ieme. T. III. Pp. (51-) 72. This extract has the orig. printed wrappers from Tome III.
First edition of Ångström's importent paper on the transformation of heat through materials. Angstrom determined the conductivity of the material of a bar by periodically heating and cooling it. The bar was heated and cooled periodically by passing steam and water at regular intervals through a chamber at one end of the bar ... In this way, the temperature at points along the bar fluctuate periodically and on account of surface radiation the temperature amplitude diminishes as the distance from the region of supply increases.In 1868, Ångström created a spectrum chart of solar radiation that expresses the wavelength of electromagnetic radiation in the electromagnetic spectrum in multiples of one ten-millionth of a millimetre, or 1×10-10 metres. This unit of length later became known as the ångström, Å.
Upsala, Berling, 1875. Uncut in original printed wrappers. The entire volume of ""Nova Acta Regiæ Societatis Scient. Upsaliensis."" Seriei Tertiæ. Vol. IX, Fasc. II. The memoir: 34 pp. and 2 large folded plates.
First printing.""A work on the spectra of the metalliods, which was begun some years previously, was completed by Tobias Robert Thalén, who actively assisted Ångström for many years, and was published in 1875. In opposition to the view that a given chemical element had a multiplicity of spectra, depending upon conditions, Ångström remained a strong defender of the opinion that each chemical element had a single characteristic spectrum that remained essentially unchanged."" (DSB).
Upsal, C.A. Leffler, 1860. 4to. Uncut and unopened. Offprint from ""Actes de la Soc. Roy. des Sciences d'Upsala"", Series 3ieme. T. III. (2),22 pp.
First edition of Ångström's importent paper on the transformation of heat through materials. Angstrom determined the conductivity of the material of a bar by periodically heating and cooling it. The bar was heated and cooled periodically by passing steam and water at regular intervals through a chamber at one end of the bar ... In this way, the temperature at points along the bar fluctuate periodically and on account of surface radiation the temperature amplitude diminishes as the distance from the region of supply increases.In 1868, Ångström created a spectrum chart of solar radiation that expresses the wavelength of electromagnetic radiation in the electromagnetic spectrum in multiples of one ten-millionth of a millimetre, or 1×10-10 metres. This unit of length later became known as the ångström, Å.
Uppsala, Wahlström & C., 1848-54. 4to. Sewn as issued. Uncut. (2),16,(2),17-24,(2),25-32,(2),33-40,(2),41-48 pp.
First edition of Ångström's early work on thermometrical phenomena.Ångström was one of the early formulators of the science of modern spectroscopy he wrote extensively on terrestrial magnetism, the conduction of heat, and especially spectroscopy. He published a monumental map of the normal solar spectrum that expressed the length of light waves in units of one ten-millionth of a millimeter, a unit of length now known as the angstrom. He discovered that hydrogen is present in the sun's atmosphere, and he was the first to examine the spectrum of the aurora borealis.
Stockholm, (1851). Uncut in orig. blue blank wrappers. Wrappers a bit frayed.Offprint from ""Kungl. Svenska Vetenskaps Akademiens handlingar"". 1850. II. Pp. (425-)461 a. 2 plates. Wrappers and plates loose.
First editon. Importent pioneer work in crystallography. The papers topic is the exact nature of the relation between the various axes of a crystal, the axes of figure, of elasticity, of electrical conductivity, the thermal, the optic, and the magnetic axes.
Uppsala, Regiae Academiae Typographi, 1839. Small 4to. Sewn as issued, uncut. (4),1-10,11-20 pp. Fine and clean. Printed on thick blue paper.
First edition of Ångströms scarce doctoral dissertation, dealing with the optics of conical refraction.Ångström was one of the early formulators of the science of modern spectroscopy he wrote extensively on terrestrial magnetism, the conduction of heat, and especially spectroscopy. He published a monumental map of the normal solar spectrum that expressed the length of light waves in units of one ten-millionth of a millimeter, a unit of length now known as the angstrom. He discovered that hydrogen is present in the sun's atmosphere, and he was the first to examine the spectrum of the aurora borealis.
Kbhvn., Popp, (1831). Orig. blankt kardusomslag. 39 pp.
Originaludgave.
Kjøbenhavn (Copenhagen), Fr. Brummer, 1809. Cont. hcalf. Richly gilt spine with gilt lettering. Corners bumped. XXX,378 pp. and 11 engraved plates with many figs. Title-page and the first few leaves with a brownspot in inner margin. A few brownspots, but internally clean.
Scarce first edition of Hans Christian Oersted's first printed book (The Science of the General Laws of Nature). Oersted is universally known for his discovery of the Electro-Magnetism in 1820. In this his first printed book, Oersted proposes at least three theses that he were to follow for the rest of his life, and which he made the foundation for his discovery of Electro-Magnetism: the crucial role that experiments and thereby empiricism play in the perception of nature the fact that each individual phenomenon in nature in accordance with the philosophy of nature must be understood as a whole" and that the laws of nature are the same everywhere, in the smallest and in the greatest parts of the universe. The sort of philosophy of nature that Oersted studies and develops is by him comprehended as a product of human striving towards with its reason to ""include and penetrate the entire nature, and to explain it in its full context"" (from ""Science of the General Laws of Nature"" - own translation), which is why this philosophy is also the science of the general laws of nature (that are the same everywhere). It thus not only includes the science of movement, but also that of electricity, magnetism, light, warmth, and chemical connections, such as they all follow directly from ordinary forces of nature, and Oested's discovery in 1820 of the connection between magnetism and electricity must be seen in this connection.Both H.C. Andersen and Søren Kierkegaard admit to having been influenced by the writings of Oersted. ""He was an enthusiastic follower of the ""Naturphilosophie"" school in Germany, whose main object was the unification of physical forces, thus producing a monistic theory of the universe. It was to further this purpose that Oersted sought in actual phenomena the electro-magnetic identity of which he had already convinced himself on metaphysical grounds"" (Percy H. Muir in Printing and The Mind of Man).
Kjøbenhavn, Andr. Fred. Høst, 1850. 2 samtidige helshirtbind. Lidt umage, det ene i det brune originalbind, det andet i det sorte originalbind med blindtrykte permer. Bind 2 med svag indre fals og startende revnedannelse ved forerste fals. Begge rygge med rig forgyldning. X,190VII,206,(2, avertissement) pp. Lidt spredte brunpletter, men gennemgående er begge bind rene, trykt på velinagtigt papir.
Originaludgaven af Ørsteds naturfilosofiske hovedværk
Kjøbenhavn, Schultz, 1811. 4to. Originalt marmoreret papirsomslag. (2),44 pp. Noget brunplettet.
Originaltrykket. Yderst sjælden. I fortalen siger forfatteren, at Introduktionen skal tjene som grundlag for den række ""Indledningsforelæsninger"" som Ørsted agter at holde fremover. - Bibl. Danica II,101.
Kjöbenhavn, Poppske Trykkerie, (1831). Orig. blåt blankt omslag. 39 pp.
Originaltrykket.
København, C.A. Reitzel, 1844. Samt. hldrbd. med rig rygforgyldning. Ryg med brugsspor og hjørner stødte. XXII,360,(2) pp. Talrige tekstillustrationer i træsnit. Her og der brunplettet og de første sider med mindre skjold i indre hjørner.
Originaludgaven af Ørsteds lærebog.