EDPLG 2016 14x2 6x20 4cm. 2016. Broché.
Bon état - . quelques marques de stodckage sur couverture et coins mais du reste en bon état - envoi rapide et soigné dans enveloppe à bulles depuis france
Les Eperonniers 1989 180 pages in8. 1989. Broché. 180 pages.
bon état de conservation intérieur propre rousseurs en tête
Cédric Vilani.2013.In-8.Reliure éditeur ill.en couleurs.Ills.145 p.Etat neuf.
Du Rocher 2003 203 pages 20x1 6x13 2cm. 2003. Broché. 203 pages.
bon état cependant tranche de tête tachée intérieur propre²&
Paris, Inter-Livres, s.d. (ca 1985). 23 x 31, 22 pp. + très nombreuses planches, broché, très bon état.
Messidor / Temps Actuels broché Couverture Illustrée 1985 126 pages en format 17 - 22 cm 2-209-05684-5
Très Bon État
1972 Bélbaste , 1972. In-8. Broché. Parfait état, 129 pp. .
Brussel, Paleis der Academien, 1943 Papieromslag, 175 x 265mm., 67pp.
Mededeelingen van de Koninklijke Vllamsche Academie voor Wetenschappen, Letteren en Schoone Kunsten van Belgie. Klasse der Wetenschappen. Jaargang V, n? 5.
"DIRAC, P.A.M. (PAUL ADRIEN MAURICE). - THE RADIATION THEORY, THE BIRTH OF QUANTUM ELECTRODYNAMICS
Reference : 47023
(1927)
London, Harrison And Sons, Ltd., 1927. Royal8vo. Contemp. full cloth. A small stamp on verso of titlepage. In: ""Proceedings of the Royal Society of London"", Series A, Vol. 114. VI,IX,748 pp. (entire volume offered). Dirac's papers: pp. 243-265 a. pp. 710-728. Clean and fine.
First appearance of these milestone papers in Quantum Physics, constituting the first step in Quantum Field Theory and the invention of the Second Quantifization Method. By these papers Dirac ""gave the foundation for that theory, quantum electrodynamics""(Pais).""A New Radiation Theory. Dirac liked his transformation theory because it was the outcome of a planned line of research and not a fortuitous discovery. He forced his future investigations to fit it. The first results of this strategy were almost miraculous. First came his new radiation theory, in February 1927, which quantized for the first time James Clerk Maxwell’s radiation in interaction with atoms. Previous quantum-mechanical studies of radiation problems, except for Jordan’s unpopular attempt, retained purely classical fields. In late 1925 Jordan had applied Heisenberg’s rules of quantization to continuous free fields and obtained a light-quantum structure with the expected statistics (Bose Einstein) and dual fluctuation properties. Dirac further demonstrated that spontaneous emission and its characteristics—previously taken into account only by special postulates—followed from the interaction between atoms and the quantum field. Essential to this success was the fact that Dirac’s transformation theory eliminated from the interpretation of the quantum formalism every reference to classical emitted radiation, contrary to Heisenberg’s original point of view and also to Schrödinger’s concept of ? as a classical source of field.This work was done during Dirac’s visit to Copenhagen in the winter of 1927. Presumably to please Bohr, who insisted on wave-particle duality and equality, Dirac opposed the ""corpuscular point of view"" to the quantized electromagnetic ""wave point of view."" He started with a set of massless Bose particles described by symmetric ? waves in configuration space. As he discovered by’ playing with the equations, ’ this description was equivalent to a quantized Schrödinger equation in the space of one particle"" this’ second quantization’ was already known to Jordan, who during 1927 extended it into the basic modern quantum field representation of matter. Dirac limited his use of second quantization electromagnetic to radiation: to establish that the corpuscular point of view, once brought into this form, was equivalent to the wave point of view.""(DSB).
McGraw-Hill Kogakusha Ltd , McGraw-Hill Series in Electronic Systems Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1972 Book condition, Etat : Bon paperback, editor's grey printed wrappers, illustrated by curves (oscillations) In-8 1 vol. - 453 pages
Student edition, date mentioned 1972, maybe after Contents, Chapitres : Contents, Preface, xii, Text, 441 pages - Introduction : The first-order system - Second-order systems - Elementary matrix theory - Higher-order systems - Macroscopic system theory and transform analysis - Stability - Computational aspects of system theory - Index minor folding tracks on the bottom left corner of the front-part of the wrappers, wrappers remains clean and unmarked, inside is clean, but few ex-library stamps on the title-page, main text remains clean and unmarked, a good reading copy, paper very lightly yellowing
Dirk De Geest, O. de Graef, D. Delabastita, Koenraad Geldof, Rita Ghesquiere, Jose Lambert.
Reference : 26338
Leuven, Universitaire Pers, 2000 Paperback, English, original editor's jacket, 16x24 cm., vi-408 pp. ISBN 9789058670281.
Professor Hendrik Van Gorp was dean of the Arts Faculty, head of the department of Literary Studies and a prominent and unfailingly inspiring member of the section for General and Comparative Literature. At the end of the academic year 1999-2000 he retired from his academic post. On Saturday May the 6th he delivered his valedictory lecture: Tussen interpretatie en wetenschap: academische literatuurstudie? On this occasion his colleagues offered him 'Under Construction. Links for the Site of Literary Theory', a collection of essays written by international scholars. This volume is both an act of homage to Hendrik Van Gorp and a representation of the diverse areas of literary research in which he has been active: narratology, hermeneutics, the study of translation and adaptation, and the study of literary dynamics.