Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: (Washington Government Printing Office ), 1898
Anbieter: Antiquariat Gerhard Gruber, Heilbronn, Deutschland
SS. (157)-168. Mit 3 Tafeln. Rückenbroschur. (Aus: Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Instit.). Wiederabdruck der im gleichen Jahr im "Philosophical Magazine" erschienenen ersten Ausgabe. - Thomson gelingt 1897 die Aufklärung des Rätsels um die Natur der Kathodenstrahlen. Er kann nachweisen, dass die Kathodenstrahlen aus negativ geladenen Teilchen bestehen, deren Masse 1800mal kleiner ist als die des Wasserstoffatoms. Er wird damit zum Entdecker des Elektrons, das er aber bis 1907 als "Korpuskel" bezeichnet. "Damit hatte er die Physik revolutioniert. Es gab kein 'unzerstörbares' Atom mehr und es fing an, wahrscheinlich zu werden, daß der allgemeine Baustoff aller Materie eine Form von Energie war. Thomsons Entdeckung stellte fast jedem Zweig der Physik neue Aufgaben und öffnete neue Forschungsgebiete" (PMM). - Gut erhalten. - DSB 13, 371; vgl. PMM 386 (a).
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: London Taylor & Francis, 1897
Anbieter: Antiquariat Gerhard Gruber, Heilbronn, Deutschland
Erstausgabe
EUR 2.420,00
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den Warenkorb(22 x 14 cm). VII, 520 S. Mit zahlreichen Abbildungen und 5 (4 gefalteten) Tafeln. Halbleinwandband der Zeit. Erste Ausgabe. - Thomson gelingt 1897 die Aufklärung des Rätsels um die Natur der Kathodenstrahlen. Er kann nachweisen, dass die Kathodenstrahlen aus negativ geladenen Teilchen bestehen, deren Masse 1800mal kleiner ist als die des Wasserstoffatoms. Er wird damit zum Entdecker des Elektrons, das er aber bis 1907 als "Korpuskel" bezeichnet. "Damit hatte er die Physik revolutioniert. Es gab kein 'unzerstörbares' Atom mehr und es fing an, wahrscheinlich zu werden, daß der allgemeine Baustoff aller Materie eine Form von Energie war. Thomsons Entdeckung stellte fast jedem Zweig der Physik neue Aufgaben und öffnete neue Forschungsgebiete" (PMM). Den Nobelpreis für Physik erhält er 1906 allerdings für seine Untersuchungen zur elektrischen Leitung durch Gase. - Titel etwas gebräunt und gestempelt. Rücken leicht ausgebleicht, sonst sauber und wohlerhalten. - DSB 13, 371, 26; PMM 386 (a); Dibner 165.
Verlag: Taylor and Francis, 1899., London:, 1899
Anbieter: Jeff Weber Rare Books, Neuchatel, NEUCH, Schweiz
Erstausgabe
8vo. Pages (253)-268; 269-284; 415-416. [Entire volume: vii, [1], 580 pp.] 4 figs. in the first paper. Contemporary quarter morocco, morocco corners, marbled boards, raised bands, gilt spine; lightly rubbed. Ex library bookplate of The University of Chicago Library and perforated stamp on title. Very good. FIRST EDITION of Thomson's "pioneering theory of the conduction of electricity in gases." DSB. This paper reports on the experimental work that formed the basis of Thomson's famous Conduction of electricity through gases (Cambridge, 1903) which is cited in Dibner, PMM, Haskell Norman Library and others. "Thomson was President of the Royal Society from 1915 to 1920 and Noble Prize Winner in Physics in 1906. He made the Cavendish Laboratory at Cambridge the greatest experimental school in physics ever known and was succeeded there by his pupil Rutherford." PMM. DSB, XIII, p. 364. See: Dibner, Heralds of science, rev. ed., 165; Haskell Norman Library 2076; Printing and the mind of man 386.
Verlag: Taylor and Francis, London, 1897
Anbieter: Heritage Book Shop, ABAA, Beverly Hills, CA, USA
Erstausgabe
First Edition. Full Description: THOMSON, Sir Joseph John. Cathode Rays. [In]: The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. Being a Continuation of Tilloch's 'Philosophical Magazine,' Nicholson's 'Journal,' and Thomson's 'Annals of Philosophy.' Conducted by Lord Kelvin, LL.D. F.R.S. &c. George Francis Fitzgerald, M.A. Sc.D. F.R.S. and William Francis, Ph.D. F.L.S. F.R.A.S. F.C.S. 'Fifth Series.No 269- October 1897. With one plate. Illustrative of Prof. D.B. Brace's paper on Oberservations on Light Propagated in a Dielectric Normal to the lines of Force. London: Taylor and Francis, October, 1897. First edition. Octavo (8 7/16 x 5 9/16 inches; 215 x 142 mm). 293-368 pp. Thomson's article on Cathode rays comprised pages 293-316 with six black and white line-drawings, some numerical charts and equations. Along this article are eight other articles and one engraved plate. Publisher's original blue printed wrappers, neatly rebacked to style. Edges speckled red. We could find no other copy in the original wrappers at auction. An about fine copy. This was the first of Thomson's papers on the discovery of sub-atomic particles. "It was reserved for J.J. Thomson (knighted in 1908) to discover the true nature of the cathode rays. In April 1897 he gave a public demonstration at one of the Friday evening discourses at the Royal Institute in which he declared that cathode rays are composed of particles of sub-atomic proportions. At this stage, he had been unable to calculate the weight of the particles, but he had measured their rate of charge to mass. The ratio was large, so they must either have a big charge or a small mass. Thomson gave reasons for preferring the latter-from experiments performed by Kenard in particular. If the charge could be calculated, then the mass could be found, since the ratio between the two was known, Thomson eventually succeeded in calculating the charge, by an ingenious adaptation of the 'dust counter' devised by C.T.R. Wilson. Thomson substituted for the dust particles counted by Wilson the cathode-ray particles. By observing variations in their fall in various electric fields he was able to calculate the electric charge of the particles. These experiments, later perfected by Millikan, led to the calculation of the mass of the electron as one eighteen-hundredth of a hydrogen atom, hitherto the lightest known object. Moreover the mass of these 'corpuscles', as Thomson called them, was constant, whatever their origin. That is to say that all forms of matter, no matter how varied their chemical composition, produced cathode rays of uniform make-up. Although he still preferred as late as 1907 'corpuscle' to 'electron' to describe this ultimate particle, Thomson has provided experimental proof of the theoretical speculation of Lorentz. In doing so he had revolutionized the science of physics. The 'indestructible' atom was no more and it began to seem likely that the common constituent of all matter was a form of energy. Thomson's discovery opened up new fields of investigation in almost every branch of physics." (PMM 386). Printing and the Mind of Man 386. HBS 68815. $4,500.
Verlag: London Taylor & Francis, 1897
Anbieter: Zentralantiquariat Leipzig GmbH, Leipzig, Deutschland
EUR 2.000,00
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbIn: The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. Series 5 Vol. 44 = July-December 1897, No. 269, pp. 293-316. Bound in half leather with gilt-stamped title on spine. Edges rubbed and spine loose and torn. Title page and some plates are brown-spotted and a bit soiled. The last few pages are a bit creased. Poggendorff V, 1254. - The complete Volume includes 6 plates. VII, 520 pp.- In this Volume is also included the following First Edition of: RUTHERFORD, E., The Velocity and Rate of Recombination of the Ions of Gases exposed to Röntgen Radiation. No. 270, pp. 422-440. Poggendorff V, 1083. Sprache: Englisch.