Bruxelles, C. Marquardt, 1887. Contemp. hcalf. Spine gilt and titlelabel with gilt lettering. One corner bumped. A paperlabel pasted on lower part of spine. Stamp on titlepage. An original photo as frontispiece: ""Vue générale des aciéries Krupp à Essen"". VII,238 pp. and 4 folded plates.
The scarce first edition.
Gimet-Pisseau. Non daté. In-12. Relié. Etat d'usage, Couv. remarquable, Dos satisfaisant, Papier jauni. 127 pages. Coiffes légèrement frottées.. . . . Classification Dewey : 674-Technologie du bois et du liège
Faisant connaître : 1° toutes les formules permettant d'obtenir exactement le volume des arbres en grume ou équarris - 2° les divers modes employés dans le commerce pour le cubage des bois suivant les usages locaux. Classification Dewey : 674-Technologie du bois et du liège
Gimet-Pisseau. Non daté. In-16. Cartonné. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Papier jauni. 127 pages. Non daté. Petite signature à l'encre en page de titre.. . . . Classification Dewey : 674-Technologie du bois et du liège
Classification Dewey : 674-Technologie du bois et du liège
Paris CAL - Culture , Arts, Loisirs 1972 In 8 , carré Très complet , illustré de nombreux schémas en noir et blanc et des photographies en couleurs . - 192 p. , 450 gr.
Couverture souple Très Bon État . 1° édition
Paris CAL - Culture , Arts, Loisirs 1972 In 8 , carré Très complet , illustré de nombreux schémas en noir et blanc et des photographies en couleurs . - 192 p. , 450 gr.
Couverture souple Très Bon État . 1° édition
Paris CAL - Culture , Arts, Loisirs 1972 In 8 , carré Très complet , illustré de nombreux schémas en noir et blanc et des photographies en couleurs . - 192 p. , 450 gr.
Couverture souple Très Bon État . 1° édition
Paris CAL - Culture , Arts, Loisirs 1972 In 8 , carré Très complet , illustré de nombreux schémas en noir et blanc et des photographies en couleurs . - 192 p. , 450 gr.
Couverture souple Très Bon État . 1° édition
Paris, Belfond, 1988. 20 x 28, 335 pp., nombreuses illustrations en couleurs et en N/B, reliure d'édition carton imprimé, très bon état.
Paris, Nouvelle Bibliothèque pour tous, vers 1920. 165 X 250 mm. 4 volumes reliés rel. en 1 vol. demi-basane marron, dos à nerfs, pièce de titre rouge, couv. cons. 127, 95, 103 et 109 pp. Orné de dessins et photos de l'auteur. Dos passé, 1 feuillet scotché avec une importante décharge de colle.
Phone number : 41 021 964 60 10
"J.B. Baillère et Fils. 1949. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Coiffe en tête abîmée, Intérieur bon état. 150 pages. Dos frotté sur les coiffes et les mors. Collection ""Tous les métiers, préparation au certificat d'aptitude professionnelle"". Ouvrage illustré de 80 figures en noir dans le texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 664-Technologie des aliments"
Classification Dewey : 664-Technologie des aliments
Union technique intersyndicale pharmaceutique. 1962. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos frotté, Intérieur frais. 223 pp., légères rousseurs sur les plats - 1 PHOTO DISPONIBLE.. . . . Classification Dewey : 668-Technologie des autres produits organiques
Classification Dewey : 668-Technologie des autres produits organiques
Paris, Leneveau, 1837. Contemp. half calf. Gilt spine with gilt lettering. A paperlabel pasted on upper part of spine. Stamps on title-page. (4),VIII,330,(4) pp.
Klaus Jordan, 2608. - Poggendorff II, 207.
Kjøbenhavn, Reitzel, 1841. Samtidigt hldrbd. med rygforgyldning. papirsetiket påsat øverst på ryg. Stempler på titelbladet. XII,355,(1) pp., tekstillustrationer.
Første danske udgave.
Publi Union Publi Union, 1985. In-8 broché. 255 pages. Préface de Pierre Aigrain. Bon état.
Toutes les expéditions sont faites en suivi au-dessus de 25 euros. Expédition quotidienne pour les envois simples, suivis, recommandés ou Colissimo.
Paris. Dunod. 1962. Bibliothèque de l'Enseignement Technique. In-8. Br. Classe de 2ème. Préparation au brevet de radio-électricien et au brevet de technicien électronicien. Nbrs figures. 208 p. TBE. Qlques légères rousseurs.
New York, American Telephone and Telegraph Company, 1947. 8vo. In the original printed blue wrappers. In ""The Bell System Technical Journal"", Volume XXVI, October, Number 4, 1947. Entire issue offered. Light miscolouring to spine. A fine fine and clean copy. Pp. 693-817. [Entire issue: 693-904 pp.].
First printing of Morrison's extensive paper of different models of the radar receiver.
New York, Dover Publications, 1961. 8vo. In the original printed wrappers. Fine and clean. 400 pp.
Washington, Philip & Solomons, 1869. Orig. full cloth. Spine with gilt lettering. A paperlabel pasted on upper part of spine. A stamp on title-page. 166 pp., 23 textillustrations.
First edition. This is Morse's comprehensive description of the telegrapic apparatus exhibited in Paris 1867.""This extensive illustrated report, probably Morse's most lenghtly published discussion of telegraphy, includes a detailed account of Morse's own telegraph system and of the morse code, a brief report on submarine telegraphy, a section on automatic recording telegraphs and information on telegraph systems in various countries."" (Hook & Norman No. 396).Weaver Gift: 1749. - Sabin: 50963.
Braunschweig, Eduard Leibrock, 1845. Contemp. hcalf. Gilt spine with gilt lettering. A paperlabel pasted on upper part of spine. Stamps on title-page. XIV,536,VI,(2),404 pp. Profusely textillustrated with woodcuts.
o.J.(um 1906). 4°. 26 S. Orig.-Heft (mit kleineren Einrissen).
Paris, Dunod, 1958. 12 x 18, 91 pp., 21 figures, broché, bon état.
traduit par Geneviève Guéron.
METEORE. Mars 1958. In-4. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 87 pages. Nombreuses photos en noir et blanc, dans le texte. Encars publicitaires en couleurs.. . . . Classification Dewey : 664-Technologie des aliments
Revue Technique de l'Industrie Alimentaire. Nouvelles applications des enzymes en technologie alimentaire - Un nouveau pliage étanche pour les tablettes de chocolat - L'utilisation en biscuiterie du miel et du sucre d'érable. Classification Dewey : 664-Technologie des aliments
Paris, 1869. 8vo. Contemporary green half cloth with gilt red leather title-label to spine. A bit of wear to extremities and title-label with wear. A bit of brownspotting to first and last leaves. VII, (1), 238 pp. Illustrated.
Scarce first edition, presentation-copy, of the first book explicitly devoted to solar energy, ""Solar Energy and its Industrial Applications"", which coincided with the unveiling of Mouchot's largest solar steam engine, the so-called ""Sun Engine"", in 1869, which caused a revolution in the development of solar thermal power. His 1869 work constitutes a milestone of what we now call ""green energy"", as it laid the foundation for our understanding of the conversion of solar radiation into mechanical power driven by steam.The PRESENTATION-INSCRIPTION, to the half-title reads: ""|a Monsieur Burdallot/ hommage de l'auteur/ A. Mouchot"". Auguste Mouchot was a French mathematics teacher, who in the 1860'ies became famous as the designer (and patent-taker) of the first machine that generated electricity with solar thermal energy electricity by the exposure of the sun. Mouchot began his work with solar energy in 1860 after expressing grave concerns about his country's dependence on coal. His work on solar energy and on the development of his sun machine forms the basis for the later developments on solar energy. ""The work of Adams, Ericsson, and Shuman had been directly influenced by the solar conceptions of Augustin Mouchot, a man who arrived on the scene in nineteenth century France at precisely that moment when his ideas were likely to attract the most attention. It was a time when French industrial might was at a peak and her leaders open to new ideas, none more so than her emperor. In 1867, to commemorate the explosion of technology that had accompanied the industrial and artistic carnival over which he had presided for 15 years, France's Napoleon III decided to invite the whole world to an international exposition that he would host in Paris."" (Kryza, The Power of Light, p. 147). ""His initial experiments involved a glass-enclosed, water-filled iron cauldron, in which sunlight passed through a glass cover, heating the water. This simple arrangement boiled water, but it also produced small quantities of steam. Mouchot added a reflector to concentrate additional radiation onto the cauldron, thus increasing the steam output. He succeeded in using his apparatus to operate a small, conventional steam engine. Impressed by Mouchot's device, Emperor Napoleon III offered financial assistance, which Mouchot used to produce refinements to the energy system. Mouchot's work help lay the foundation for our current understanding of the conversion of solar radiation into mechanical power driven by steam.The publication of his book on solar energy, ""La Chaleur solaire et ses Applications industrielles"" (1869), coincided with the unveiling of the largest solar steam engine he had yet built. This engine was displayed in Paris until the city fell under siege during the Franco-Prussian War in 1871, and was not found after the siege ended."" (The Energy Library).
(Paris, Gauthier-Villars), 1875. 4to. The entire issue (vol. 81, nr. 14) of Comptes Rendus present. Unbound, and without wrappers. Very light brownspotting. Pp. 571-574. [Entire issue: pp. (545)- 604].
First printing of the paper in which Mouchot presents his seminal solar generator. Auguste Mouchot was a French mathematics teacher, who in the 1860'ies became famous as the designer (and patent-taker) of the first machine that generated electricity with solar thermal energy electricity by the exposure of the sun. Mouchot began his work with solar energy in 1860 after expressing grave concerns about his country's dependence on coal. His work on solar energy and on the development of his sun machine forms the basis for the later developments on solar energy. ""The work of Adams, Ericsson, and Shuman had been directly influenced by the solar conceptions of Augustin Mouchot, a man who arrived on the scene in nineteenth century France at precisely that moment when his ideas were likely to attract the most attention. It was a time when French industrial might was at a peak and her leaders open to new ideas, none more so than her emperor. In 1867, to commemorate the explosion of technology that had accompanied the industrial and artistic carnival over which he had presided for 15 years, France's Napoleon III decided to invite the whole world to an international exposition that he would host in Paris."" (Kryza, The Power of Light, p. 147). ""His initial experiments involved a glass-enclosed, water-filled iron cauldron, in which sunlight passed through a glass cover, heating the water. This simple arrangement boiled water, but it also produced small quantities of steam. Mouchot added a reflector to concentrate additional radiation onto the cauldron, thus increasing the steam output. He succeeded in using his apparatus to operate a small, conventional steam engine. Impressed by Mouchot's device, Emperor Napoleon III offered financial assistance, which Mouchot used to produce refinements to the energy system. Mouchot's work help lay the foundation for our current understanding of the conversion of solar radiation into mechanical power driven by steam.The publication of his book on solar energy, ""La Chaleur solaire et ses Applications industrielles"" (1869), coincided with the unveiling of the largest solar steam engine he had yet built. This engine was displayed in Paris until the city fell under siege during the Franco-Prussian War in 1871, and was not found after the siege ended.In September 1872, Mouchout received financial assistance from the General Council of Indre-et-Loire to install an experimental solar generator at the Tours library. He presented a paper on the generator to the Academy of Sciences on 4 October 1875, and in December of the same year he presented to the Academy a device he claimed would, in optimal sunshine, provide a steam flow of 140 liters per minute. (The Energy Library).Mouchot is the first author to write explicitly about solar energy and how to convert solar radiation into usable energy, thus laying the foundation for what we now call ""green energy"".