Larousse 1980 7x13. 1980. Broché. 224 pages. Bon Etat intérieur propre
Dulau and Co, London , Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1902 Book condition, Etat : Bon paperback, editor's original printed green wrappers, plastified In-4 1 vol. - 53 pages
3 text-figures in black 1st edition, 1902 "Contents, Chapitres : Introduction - 1. The criterion of stability : The principal vibrations of a spherical nebula - Discussion of the frequency equation - An isothermal nebula - The general case of a nebula extending to infinity - Exchange of stabilities - Recapitulation and discussion of results - 2. Evaluation of the stability function : General case of a nebula at rest - A slowly rotating nebula - Influence of viscosity - A nebula in process of cooling - 3. Summary and discussion of results - 4. The unsymmetrical configurations of a nebula - A nebula in isothermal-adiabatic equilibrium - The evolution of nebula - Conclusion - Sir James Hopwood Jeans, 11 September 1877 16 September 1946, was an English physicist, astronomer and mathematician. - Jeans was elected Fellow of Trinity College in October 1901, and taught at Cambridge, but went to Princeton University in 1904 as a professor of applied mathematics. He returned to Cambridge in 1910. He made important contributions in many areas of physics, including quantum theory, the theory of radiation and stellar evolution. His analysis of rotating bodies led him to conclude that Pierre-Simon Laplace's theory that the solar system formed from a single cloud of gas was incorrect, proposing instead that the planets condensed from material drawn out of the sun by a hypothetical catastrophic near-collision with a passing star. This theory is not accepted today. Jeans, along with Arthur Eddington, is a founder of British cosmology. In 1928, Jeans was the first to conjecture a steady state cosmology based on a hypothesized continuous creation of matter in the universe. In his book Astronomy and Cosmology (1928) he stated: ""The type of conjecture which presents itself, somewhat insistently, is that the centers of the nebulae are of the nature 'singular points' at which matter is poured into our universe from some other, and entirely extraneous spatial dimension, so that, to a denizen of our universe, they appear as points at which matter is being continually created."" This theory fell out of favour when the 1965 discovery of the cosmic microwave background was widely interpreted as the tell-tale signature of the Big Bang. - In stellar physics, the Jeans instability causes the collapse of interstellar gas clouds and subsequent star formation, named after James Jeans. It occurs when the internal gas pressure is not strong enough to prevent gravitational collapse of a region filled with matter. For stability, the cloud must be in hydrostatic equilibrium, which in case of a spherical cloud. The equilibrium is stable if small perturbations are damped and unstable if they are amplified. In general, the cloud is unstable if it is either very massive at a given temperature or very cool at a given mass; under these circumstances, the gas pressure cannot overcome gravity, and the cloud will collapse. - Jeans' length is the critical radius of a cloud (typically a cloud of interstellar molecular gas and dust) where thermal energy, which causes the cloud to expand, is counteracted by gravity, which causes the cloud to collapse. It is named after the British astronomer Sir James Jeans, who concerned himself with the stability of spherical nebulae in the early 1900s. (our copy according to Wikipedia)." "Near fine condition, the wrappers are fine but the former owner had PLASTIFIED the booklet, outside until the left border of the first page and last page, else fine copy, few foxings on the wrappers, inside is fine, clean and bright, no markings, it remains a near fine copy of this rather rare book from J.H. Jeans - Offprint, presentation copy, paginated 1 to 53, with specific original wrappers, it's not a copy extracted from a larger volume. This early work is not directly mentioned in the D.S.B. even if : ""As early as 1902-1903 Jeans occupated himself with the forms and stability of rotating liquid masses, inspired in this by the work of George Darwin. Poincaré had traced the evolution of a rotating incompressible fluid mass slowly contracting gravitationally through ellipsoidal figures to a pear-shaped figure but was unable to decide the stability of the latter. By an incomplete argument Darwin concluded that the pear-shaped figure was stable, but, in 1905n Lyapunov demonstrated the opposite. Jeans's earliest work in this field had been to compute the equilibrium figures of rotating liquid cylinders"" (DSB, volume 7-8, page 85). First important book published by Jeans was in 1904, ""The Dynamical Theory of Gases"". The paper was communicated by the Astronomer George Darwin, 1845-1912, the second son and fifth child of Charles Darwin and Emma Darwin."
Cambridge University Press Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1929 Book condition, Etat : Bon hardcover, editor's dark blue clothes printed binding, no dust-jacket small and large In-4 1 vol. - 438 pages
16 plates out of text (Complete) 2d Edition, 1929 Contents, Chapitres : Contents, List of illustrations, Preface, x, Text, 428 pages - The astronomical survey of the Universe - The light from the stars - Gaseous stars - The source of stellar energy - Liquid states - The evolution of the stars - Non-spherical masses, dynamical principles - The configurations of rotating liquid masses - The configurations of rotating compressible masses - Rotation and fission of stars - The evolution of binary systems - The ages of the stars - The great nebulae - The galactic system of stars - Variable stars - The Solar System - Conclusion - Index of subjects, index of names - James Hopwood Jeans (11 septembre 1877 à Ormskirk 16 septembre 1946 à Dorking) est un physicien, astronome et mathématicien britannique. Il a écrit plusieurs ouvrages de vulgarisation scientifique, sur l'histoire de la mécanique et de la physique, et sur les implications philosophiques des théories scientifiques les plus récentes. - Il fit d'importantes contributions dans plusieurs domaines de la physique, comme ceux de la théorie des quanta, de la théorie du rayonnement et de l'évolution stellaire. Son analyse des corps en rotation le conduisit à conclure que la théorie de Laplace selon laquelle le système solaire était formé d'un seul nuage de gaz était incorrecte, proposant à la place que les planètes se soient formées à partir de matériaux arrachés au soleil par une hypothétique quasi-collision catastrophique avec une étoile de passage. Cette théorie est maintenant abandonnée. Jeans avec Arthur Eddington, est considéré être à l'origine de l'excellence britannique en cosmologie, un fait qui a persisté jusqu'à nos jours. Jeans fut le premier à proposer une cosmologie stationnaire basée sur une hypothétique création continue de matière dans l'univers. Cette théorie tomba en désuétude lorsque la découverte en 1965 du fond diffus cosmologique fut largement interprétée comme la signature révélatrice du Big Bang. Sa réputation scientifique est inscrite dans les monographies La Théorie dynamique des gaz (1904), Mécanique théorique (1906) et Théorie mathématique de l'électricité et du magnétisme (1908). Après son départ en retraite en 1929, il écrivit plusieurs livres pour le public profane, dont Les Étoiles dans leur course (1931), L'Univers autour de nous, À travers l'espace et le temps (1934), Les Nouvelles Bases philosophiques de la science (1933) et L'Univers mystérieux. Ces livres ont rendu Jeans assez bien connu comme vulgarisateur des découvertes scientifiques révolutionnaires de son époque, particulièrement en relativité et en cosmologie. (source : Wikipedia) near fine condition, the editor's binding is rather good condition, very lightly dusty on the boards, inside is fine, no markings, except the signature of the former owner on the first page (private collection), with a date, text fine and unmarked, a very good copy of the second edition, 1929, complete of the 16 plates
Librairie Scientifique Albert Blanchard à Paris , Collection de Monographies Etrangères Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1925 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché, sous couverture imprimée éditeur grise grand In-8 1 vol. - 517 pages
26 figures dans le texte en noir 1ere traduction en français, 1925 Contents, Chapitres : Avant-propos, vii, Texte, 510 pages + 4 pages de catalogue sur papier vert - Introduction - La loi de distribution des vitesses - Mécanique statistique générale et thermodynamique - Propriétés physiques : Température, pression, etc.. - Mouvement d'ensemble, thermodynamique, calorimétrie et dissociation - Phénomènes dans un gaz qui n'est pas à l'état stable - Le ibre parcours - Viscosité - Conduction de la chaleur - Diffusion - Les données de la théorie cinétique sur la grandeur des molécules - Aérostatique et atmosphère planétaires - Mécanique statique et partition de l'énergie dans un milieu continu - Ryonnement et théorie des quanta - Dynamique des quanta - Appendice : Intégrales contenant des exponentielles - James Hopwood Jeans (11 septembre 1877 à Ormskirk 16 septembre 1946 à Dorking) est un physicien, astronome et mathématicien britannique. Il a écrit plusieurs ouvrages de vulgarisation scientifique, sur l'histoire de la mécanique et de la physique, et sur les implications philosophiques des théories scientifiques les plus récentes. - Il fit d'importantes contributions dans plusieurs domaines de la physique, comme ceux de la théorie des quanta, de la théorie du rayonnement et de l'évolution stellaire. Son analyse des corps en rotation le conduisit à conclure que la théorie de Laplace selon laquelle le système solaire était formé d'un seul nuage de gaz était incorrecte, proposant à la place que les planètes se soient formées à partir de matériaux arrachés au soleil par une hypothétique quasi-collision catastrophique avec une étoile de passage. Cette théorie est maintenant abandonnée. Jeans avec Arthur Eddington, est considéré être à l'origine de l'excellence britannique en cosmologie, un fait qui a persisté jusqu'à nos jours. Jeans fut le premier à proposer une cosmologie stationnaire basée sur une hypothétique création continue de matière dans l'univers. Cette théorie tomba en désuétude lorsque la découverte en 1965 du fond diffus cosmologique fut largement interprétée comme la signature révélatrice du Big Bang. (source : Wikipedia) bel exemplaire, couverture propre et en très bon état, à peine frottée sur le mors du plat inférieur, intérieur frais et propre, papier un peu jauni, cela reste un bel exemplaire de l'édition princeps de ce texte de J.-H. Jeans sur la thermodynamique présentant son lien avec la théorie des quanta
, 1925, in-8, [4]-510 pp, Demi-basane noire de l'époque, dos à faux nerfs, De la Collection de monographies scientifiques étrangères, publiée sous la direction de M.G. Juvet. Premier traité rédigé par le physicien et astronome britannique James Hopwood Jeans (1877-1946). L'ouvrage a été publié pour la première fois en 1904 (Dynamical Theory of Gases) : "It became a standart text book, both because of its clarity and elegance and because Jeans incorporated into it the result of his own research" (DSB). Bel exemplaire. DSB VII, p. 84. Couverture rigide
Bon [4]-510 pp.
New York, MacMillan Company, 1948, un volume in 8 relié en pleine toile éditeur, 1 frontispice, 10pp., 364pp., 12 planches
---- BEL EXEMPLAIRE ---- FIRST AMERICAN EDITION ---- "From 1928, Jeans occupied himself with the popularization of science... He gave series of radio lectures which served as a source for The Universe Around us (1928)... The red lecture in 1930 led to The Mysterious Universe... Further works followed : The Stars in Their Courses and Through Space and Time, popularizing astronomy and The New background of Science, treating modern physics, all written in Jeans's fluence and exciting style. His final books, Physics and philosophy (1942) and The Growth of Physical Science (1947), were written in a more historical and restrained manner". (DSB VII p. 86)**2820/8320/K4
P., Hermann, 1933, un volume in 8, relié en demi-soie bleue marine, dos orné de filets et fleurons dorés, couvertures conservées (reliure de l'époque), 1 portrait, 13pp., 186pp., 2 planches
---- Deuxième édition REVUE ET AUGMENTEE ---- "From 1928, Jeans occupied himself with the popularization of science... He gave series of radio lectures which served as a source for The Universe Around us (1928)... The red lecture in 1930 led to The Mysterious Universe... Further works followed : The Stars in Their Courses and Through Space and Time, popularizing astronomy and The New background of Science, treating modern physics, all written in Jeans's fluence and exciting style. His final books, Physics and philosophy (1942) and The Growth of Physical Science (1947), were written in a more historical and restrained manner". (DSB VII p. 86)**2823/K4-8329/CAV.F3
P., Hermann, 1935, un volume in 8, broché, couverture imprimée, 1 portrait, 1 planche frontispice, 308pp.
---- PREMIERE EDITION FRANCAISE ---- BEL EXEMPLAIRE ---- "From 1928, Jeans occupied himself with the popularization of science... He gave series of radio lectures which served as a source for The Universe Around us (1928)... The red lecture in 1930 led to The Mysterious Universe... Further works followed : The Stars in Their Courses and Through Space and Time, popularizing astronomy and The New background of Science, treating modern physics, all written in Jeans's fluence and exciting style. His final books, Physics and philosophy (1942) and The Growth of Physical Science (1947), were written in a more historical and restrained manner". (DSB VII p. 86)**2821/8319/K4-CAV/F2
P., Payot, 1950, un volume in 8, broché, couverture imprimée, (couverture défraîchie), 318pp., 41 figures dans le texte
---- PREMIERE EDITION FRANCAISE ---- "From 1928, Jeans occupied himself with the popularization of science... He gave series of redio lectures which served as a source for The Universe Around us (1928)... The red lecture in 1930 led to The Mysterious Universe... Further works followed : The Stars in Their Courses and Through Space and Time, popularizing astronomy and The New background of Science, treating modern physics, all written in Jeans's fluen and exciting style. His final books, Physics and philosophy (1942) and The Growth of Physical Science (1947), were written in a more historical and restrained manner". (DSB VII p. 86)**2816/K4
P., Hermann, 1935, un volume in 8, broché, couverture imprimée, 261pp., figure dans le texte
---- PREMIERE EDITION FRANCAISE ---- BEL EXEMPLAIRE ---- "From 1928, Jeans occupied himself with the popularization of science... He gave series of radio lectures which served as a source for The Universe Around us (1928)... The red lecture in 1930 led to The Mysterious Universe... Further works followed : The Stars in Their Courses and Through Space and Time, popularizing astronomy and The New background of Science, treating modern physics, all written in Jeans's fluen and exciting style...". (DSB VII p. 86) ---- La terre - L'air - Le ciel - La lune - Les planètes - Le soleil - Les étoiles - Les nébuleuses**2815/8327/K4-ARB
Générique Broché D'occasion bon état 01/01/1950 150 pages
P., Blanchard, 1925; un volume in 8, broché, couverture imprimée, (3), 123pp.
---- PREMIERE EDITION FRANCAISE ---- "This book was strongly influenced by Poincaré's important memoir of 1912, Sur la théorie des quanta , which demonstrated the near-impossibility of circumventing the quantum hypothesis by classical arguments. Jeans constructed arguments convincing himself that Planck's law could not result as a steady-state distribution in classical physics ; and in this report he stressed as sharply as possible the break which the early quantum theory represented with classical principles and the inadequate state of the quantum theory of that time...". (DSB VII p. 85)**8322/2819/M4/ARB1(1)-CAV/F5(1)-CAV/F2(2)
1921 Aix : J. Brun, 1921 16 p.,in12° broché,bon état,rare
Paris, 1931, in-8, portrait, XII, 172pp, 2pl, br, PREMIERE EDITION FRANCAISE. Portrait de James Jeans et 2 pl. h.t. La mort du soleil ; le monde nouveau de la physique ; matière et rayonnement ; relativité et éther ; les eaux profondes. Dernier plat détaché portrait, XII, 172pp., 2pl.
Paris Hermann Broché D'occasion état correct 01/01/1935 150 pages
P., Blanchard, 1925, un volume in 8, broché, (3), 510pp.
---- PREMIERE EDITION FRANCAISE ---- "Jean's first treatise. It became a standard textbook, both because of its clarity and elegance and because Jeans incorporated into it the results of his own research... It includes his treatment of the persistence of molecular velocities after collisions. When a molecule undergoes a collision in gas there is, statistically, a tendency for it to maintain some motion in the direction that it favoring of forward motion over rebounding, correction factors must be included in the derivation of the coefficients of viscosity, heat conduction and diffusion of gases. His major efforts, though, were devoted to the problems posed by the classical theorem of equipartition of energy in its application to specific heats and particularly to blackbody radiation...". (DSB VII p. 84)**2818/8323/M4-CAV/E6-CAV/F5(2)-CAV/CART19-ARB/TOIL
Paris, Hermann, 1935. 16 x 25, 308 pp., broché, partiellement non coupé, bon état.
"Traduit de l'anglais par A. Lalande; en frontispice : portrait de Sir James Jeans."
Printed in Sweden, 2000. In-4, reliure pleine toile éditeur sous jaquette illustrée en couleur dans son coffret cartonne et illustré, signet, 479 pp. Introduction - Chapter 1. The life, work and world of Lars Magnus Ericsson 1876-1900 - Chapter 2. The technology of the times 1876-1900 - Chapter 3. The foundation of the modern LM Ericsson company 1900-1918 - Chapter 4. Advancing on ...
Nombreuses illustrations en noir et en couleur. --- Plus d'informations sur le site archivesdunord.com
Phone number : 01 42 73 13 41
Paris, Hachette guides bleus, 1985; in-12, 271 pp., broché, couverture illustr.
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1935 br. in-8, 308pp., P. Hermann, 1935
Phone number : 33 (0)3 85 53 99 03
Paris. Albert Blanchard. 1925. In-8. Br. 120 p. BE. Couv. défraichie et légèrement déchirée. Annotations en tête du dos.
Paris. Albert Blanchard. 1925. In-8. Rel. demi-toile. Pièce de titre au dos. 506 p. TBE.
Paris, Hermann et Cie, 1935. In-8 rel. demi-basane, 308 p. Traduit de l'anglais. Très bon état.Ouvrage de vulgarisation sur la physique théorique.
P., Hermann & Cie, 1932, in-8, br., non rogné, VIII-206 pp., frontispice, 23 pl. h.-t., index. (SD64C)
Complet des deux mappemondes Ciel boréal et Ciel austral.