St-Romuald, Qué., Les Éditions Etchemin, 1976. 22.8 cm 183 pages, illustré de 65 photos et dessins. Broché. Envoi signé de l’auteur à M. & Mme Alfred Dionne « ses cousins de Montréal ». [ Magnan, Jean-Charles (1891- ?), auteur, professeur et un des cinq premiers agronomes québécois en 1913 ]. Manque au DOLQ.
Montréal et Paris Fides 1964
in-8 illustré planches hors-texte (portraits), 251p. Couverture illustrée. :: Recueil de biographies de personnages liés à l'agriculture... Tirage sur bon vélin. :: Broché. Bon état. ENVOI SIGNÉ de l'auteur
"MAGNAN, CLAUDE - JEAN THIBAUD et ANDRÉ MOUSSA - CHARLES HAENNY et ALBERT ROSENBERG - FRANCIS PERRIN - GUIDO BECK et PETER HAVAS.
Reference : 49286
(1939)
(Paris, Gauthier-Villars), 1939. 4to. No wrappers. In: ""Comptes Rendus hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences"", tome 208, No 10, 12, 18, 20 a. 21. Pp. (5 Entire issues offered). The papers: pp. 742-744, 744-746, 898-900,1394-96,1573-1575 a. 1643-1645. Disbound.
First printing of 5 importent papers containing substantial contributions to the development and understanding of the fission process in the crucial year 1939, the results leading to the creation the atomic bomb and nuclear energy production. Among the papers here are Francis Perrin's landmark paper: ""Calcul relatif aux conditions éventuelles de transmutation en chaine de l'uranium."" (in 2 parts).Nuclear fission of heavy elements was discovered on December 17, 1938 by Otto Hahn and his assistant Fritz Strassmann, and explained theoretically in January 1939 by Lise Meitner and her nephew Otto Robert Frisch. The Group at College de France, headed by Joliot and Perrin, worked in the month after January intensively with the uranium processes and succeeded in establishing the possibility of nuclear chain reactions and nuclear energy production.""The remaining piece of the fission/atomic bomb concept was provided in 1939 by Francis Perrin who introduced the concept of the critical mass of uranium required to produce a self-sustaining release of energy. His theories were extended by Rudolf Peierls at Birmingham University and the resulting calculations were of considerable importance in the development of the atomic bomb. Perrin's group in Paris continued their studies and demonstrated that a chain reaction could be sustained in a uranium-water mixture (the water being used to slow down the neutrons) provided external neutrons were injected into the system. They also demonstrated the idea of introducing neutron-absorbing material to limit the multiplication of neutrons and thus control the nuclear reaction (which is the basis for the operation of a nuclear power station).""