Paris, Quantin, [vers 1885]. In-4, rel. demi-maroquin à coins marine de l'époque, dos à cinq nerfs ornés à la roulette dorée, caissons dorés fleuronnés, tête dorée, couverture illustrée en couleurs conservée ; [3] ff., 227 pp., [1] f., illustrations gravées sur bois dans le texte, certaines à pleine page, portrait de l'auteur à l'eau-forte en frontispice.
Deux coins et coupes inférieures usés, nerfs frottés, charnière affaiblie, intérieur en bonne condition, bon ex. - Frais de port : -France 6,9 € -U.E. 9 € -Monde (z B : 15 €) (z C : 25 €)
(Paris, Gauthier-Villars), 1875. 4to. No wrappers. In: ""Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences"", Tome 81, No 14. [Mouchot's paper:] Pp. 571-574. (Entire issue offered). (1), 546-604 pp. Clean and fine.
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"".
(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"".
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, 1869. 8vo. Uncut in the original printed wrappers. Wrappers frayed at edges, a bit soiled, and with some stains. A bit of brownspotting. Last leaves with a, mostly marginal, damp stain. First few leaves a bit frayed at edges. VII, (1), 238 pp. Illustrated.
Scarce first edition 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.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).
Librairie des bibliophiles Broché D'occasion état correct 01/01/1889 140 pages
[Mouchot] - Feuillet (Octave), [Mouchot (dessins de), Méaulle (gravés par)]
Reference : 1589
Collection Calmann Lévy, Maison Quantin, Paris, n.d. (1887). 1 volume in-4 broché sous couverture rempliée illustrée en couleurs, portrait de l'auteur en frontispice gravé sur Chine, 227 pages, nombreuses illustrations. Bel état.
La librairie est ouverte du mardi au samedi de 9h30 à 12h30 et de 13h30 à 19h00. Commandes par courriel ou téléphone. Envoi rapide, emballage soigné. La librairie est ouverte du mardi au samedi de 9h30 à 12h30 et de 13h30 à 19h00. Commandes par courriel ou téléphone. Envoi rapide, emballage soigné.
Paris Eugène Hugues In-4 (32,5 x 22 cm.) 288 pp. couverture conservée, demi-reliure à coins, maroquin brun, dos à nerfs, , tête dorée, non rogné.
Nouvelle édition tirée à 160 exemplaires numérotés, celui-ci est un des 80 sur papier vélin teinté. En plus des dessins de Victor Hugo, l'ouvrage en contient de J. Adeline, L. Mouchot, G. Gelibert, F. Méaulle et H. Vogel. (Vicaire IV 300 et 410). Libraire membre du S.L.A.M. (Syndicat national de la Librairie Ancienne et Moderne) et de la L.I.L.A. (Ligue Internationale de la Librairie Ancienne). N'hésitez pas à prendre contact par mail pour des photographies et des détails supplémentaires, pour des recherches ou des estimations de livres anciens et rares.
Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1869. 1 vol. in-8. Plein veau rouge, dos à nerfs orné, titre et auteur dorés.
Rare édition originale d'un des précurseurs de l'énergie solaire.Ouvrage orné de 35 gravures in-texte.Exemplaire de présent, avec un envoi de l'auteur à "Monsieur Deliancourt, hommage respectueux de l'auteur".Professeur de mathématiques au lycée d'Alençon, de Rennes puis de Tours, invité à continuer ces recherches dans l'atelier impérial de Meudon par Napoléon III, il présente dans ce texte le résultat de ces expériences. L'objectif est l'utilisation des rayons solaires pour l'agriculture et l'industrie, particulièrement dans les régions les plus ensoleillées. Le journal Le Rappel qualifia ainsi Augustin Mouchot de "Prométhée moderne" en 1878. La parution de ce texte a coïncidé avec l'inauguration de sa grande machine à vapeur solaire qui provoqua une révolution dans le développement de l'énergie solaire thermique.Ses travaux constituent une étape importante dans ce que l'on appelle aujourd'hui "l'énergie verte".Il effectua la démonstration de ses appareils notamment en confectionnant en quatre heures un pot-au feu d'un kilo de bœuf et d'un assortiment de légumes.Cachet Aubin Coumes - 66 Tautavel, répété au premier feuillet et au feuillet d'avant-propos.Rousseurs dans le texte. Épidermures et frottements à la reliure. Coins émoussés.
"Émile Desbeaux Bogaert Férat Gélibert Clair Guyot Habert Dys L. Mouchot Vogel -"
Reference : 9854
(1887)
"1887. Paris P. Ducrocq éditeur 1887 - cartonnage d'éditeur pleine toile rouge décor noir et doré sur le dos et le premier plat décor noir sur le plat inférieur tranches dorées 21 cm x 25 cm 287 pages - Texte de Émile Desbeaux - 100 compositions de Bogaert Férat Gélibert Clair Guyot Habert Dys L. Mouchot Vogel - Couv. un peu frottée et salie sinon b état"
Paris Maison Quantin 1887 In-4 ( cm.) 227 pp. plein maroquin prune, dos lisse, étui. Un des 100 exemplaires sur japon. Le portrait de l'auteur en frontispice est en double état, dont celui avant la lettre. Nombreuses illustrations dans le texte et hors texte gravées en noir.
Dos légèrement éclairci, titrage du dos malhabilement poussé. Libraire membre du S.L.A.M. (Syndicat national de la Librairie Ancienne et Moderne) et de la L.I.L.A. (Ligue Internationale de la Librairie Ancienne). N'hésitez pas à prendre contact par mail pour des photographies et des détails supplémentaires, pour des recherches ou des estimations de livres anciens et rares.
Les Plaies et les Baumes, 1 vol. in-8 reliure de l'époque demi-basane bordeaux, Auguste Ghio, Paris, 1887, 2 ff., VI-123 pp.
Avec un billet autographe signé par Léon Mouchot ("Cher Monsieur, Lise Consolatrice n'est qu'une fiction, comme "Le triomphe d'Yvonne" d'ailleurs, que j'ai l'honneur de vous offrir en remerciement de votre lettre et de votre sonnet [ ... ]") et les deux feuillets manuscrits de la copie de la réponse par le périgourdin Fernand Guiralou, récipiendaire en février 1893 d'un Prix au Concours de l'Anthologie Populaire de Gruissan. Bon état (coins frottés)
Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1879, in-8, de VI, 294 pages et 2 planches repliées, demi-chagrin cerise à coins de l'époque, dos à nerfs, Seconde édition, augmentée par l'auteur, et pour la première fois illustrée de deux planches finales qui représentent le Grand générateur solaire industriel exposé lors de l'Exposition Universelle de 1878 dans le Parc du Trocadéro. La première planche en est la description technique, la seconde une mise en scène avec passants et visiteurs du temps. Mouchot fut le premier à s'intéresser de manière systématique à l'utilisation et à l'exploitation industrielle et humaine de l'énergie solaire. Bon exemplaire, Tampon de l'Institut catholique de Paris annulé. Couverture rigide
Bon de VI, 294 pages et 2
Paris Librairie des Bibliophiles (Jouaust) 1889 1 vol. broché in-12, broché, 137 pp. Edition originale. Envoi de l'auteur. Dos bruni. Très bon état.
LABESSE, Ed. D - PIERRET, H. - dessins de L. Mouchot, Masson, A. O'Calaghan, etc
Reference : 6844
PARIS, Lib. Ducrocq - Grand in-8 - Reliure verte - 1 plat orné des armes dorées de la Ville de Paris - Ecoinçons en relief aux 1 & 4 plats - Frontispice - 90 dessins de L. Mouchot, Masson, A. O'Calaghan, etc - 272 pages - bon exemplaire
- ATTENTION: Colis recommandé uniquement sur demande (parcel recommended on request). Si vous désirez un remboursement équivalent au montant de votre achat, en cas de perte détérioration ou spoliation, demandez-nous expressément un envoi en recommandé ( if you wish a repayment equivalent to the amount of your purchase, in case of loss - deterioration or despoliation, ask us expressly for a sending recommended)- Conditions de vente : Les frais de port sont affichés à titre Indicatifs (pour un livre) Nous pouvons être amené à vous contacter pour vous signaler le - Conditions of sale : The shipping costs are displayed as an indication (for one book) We may need to contact you to inform you of the cost of the additional shipping depending on the weight and the number of books- Possibilité d'envoi par Mondial-Relay - Réception en boutique sur rendez-vous. Librairie G. PORCHEROT - SP.Rance - 0681233148
Cyord Ray 1948 approx.
Bon état Petit format Accordéon,Piano
Augustin MOUCHOT - [Semur en Auxois 1825 - Paris 1912] - ingènieur français, pionnier de l'énergie solaire
Reference : 34130
(1879)
1879 Paris - Gauthier-Villars et Atelier de Constructions des appareils solaires - 1879 - 1 volume in8 de 294 pages - Reliure demi chagrin noir - Dos orné de fleurons - Déchirure avec petit manque de texte à l'angle supérieur droit de la page de titre - Rousseurs habituelles -
Rare et important ouvrage bien complet des deux planches dépliantes, "Grand générateur solaire industriel" et "..mon appareil exposé au Trocadéro en 1878" pour l'exposition universelle, qui paraissent ici pour la première fois -
MEAULLE, F. (texte et gravures) - Compositions par MM. Rochegrosse, G. Caïn, L. Mouchot, Julien, Férat
Reference : 106090
A Paris, Librairie Ducrocq - Sans date - In-4, cartonnage toilé rouge avec dorures sur le premier plat et le dos, tranches dorées - 292 p. - Gravures en N&B par F. Méaulle
Bon état - Dos cassé sans incidence sur la reliure - Menus frottements sur les bords de la couverture - Rousseurs éparses dans l'ouvrage
IMP. CHIRAT - MOKA & CIE. 2023. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 178 pages illustrées en couleur. . . . Classification Dewey : 70.49-Presse illustrée, magazines, revues
Classification Dewey : 70.49-Presse illustrée, magazines, revues
x3. Tours, Maison A. Mame et Fils, 1889, petit in-4°, 16 x 12 cm, 315 pp avec 6 planches h.t de Mouchot et 60 iils. dans le texte. Chaque page avec un grand cadre d'Habert-Dys imprimé en couleurs et en or. Reliure d'éditeur en plein maroquin bleue foncé, tranches dorées, double fillets sur les coupes, contre plats avec bordure doré à la dentelle. Pages de garde en soie bleue. Dans un étui d'éditeur. Etui avec traces d'usage, le livre en très bon état (infime blessure sur le plat supérieure - seulement 1 mm²). Bon exemplaire d'un missel de luxe avec les cadres.
collectif: textes réunis par Michel Matien-Victor Schwach-Gustave N.Fischer- Victor Alexandre et Jean-Marie Mouchot
Reference : EXP19878
éditions Oberlin sans date
Bon état. Tranche salie.
Economica. 1994. In-8. Broché. Etat du neuf, Couv. fraîche, Dos impeccable, Intérieur frais. 722 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
(Très rare) 2e édition. Aboutissement d'une enseignement à la faculté des Sciences Economiques de l'Université Lumière (Lyon 2). Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
CHEVALIER BAYARD. 1942. In-8. Broché. Etat passable, Plats abîmés, Agraffes rouillées, Intérieur acceptable. 20 pages. Second plat illustré en couleurs. Nombreuses illustrations en noir et monochrome dans et hors texte. Manque le premier plat. Léger manque sur une page. Une page déchirée. Crayonnages au dos du second plat, partiellement détaché.. . . . Classification Dewey : 843.06-Bande dessinée
Classification Dewey : 843.06-Bande dessinée