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Verlag: Paris: Imprimerie Nationale, 1893
Anbieter: Aquila Antiquariaat, Lochem, GLD, Niederlande
Folio, 33cm. Pp. 165-185; title-page of volume in photocopy in front. Plain new wrappers, uncut. Fine.
Verlag: EDP Sciences, 2007
ISBN 10: 2868839738ISBN 13: 9782868839732
Anbieter: Ammareal, Morangis, Frankreich
Buch
Zustand: Très bon. Ancien livre de bibliothèque. Légères traces d'usure sur la couverture. Edition 2007. Ammareal reverse jusqu'à 15% du prix net de ce livre à des organisations caritatives. ENGLISH DESCRIPTION Book Condition: Used, Very good. Former library book. Slight signs of wear on the cover. Edition 2007. Ammareal gives back up to 15% of this book's net price to charity organizations.
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Bon. 9-[1] p. Genève, 1905, in-8, 9-[1] p, Broché, Figures dans le texte. Extrait, avec pagination nouvelle, des Archives des Sciences physiques et naturelles. Couverture dentelée.
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Bon. de 22 pages Paris, Administration des deux revues, 1892, in-8, de 22 pages, exemplaire broché, non coupé, Mémoire extrait, avec pagination nouvelle, de la "Revue scientifique".
Cours manuscrit ronéotypé in-4 (31 x 25 cm.) 505 pp. demi-basane rouge, dos lisse. Quelques frottements à la reliure, papier jauni. Henri Becquerel (1852-1908) est avec Pierre et Marie Curie, le découvreur de la radioactivité (dont l'unité porte son nom). Il reçut avec eux le prix Nobel en 1903. Langue : Français.
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Bon. 96 pages Paris, Imprimerie nationale, 1901, in-4, 96 pages, broché, non coupé, Rapport peu courant rédigé par Henri Becquerel pour l'exposition universelle de 1900 (Rapports du jury international, classe 24. Exposition universelle internationale de 1900. Ministère du commerce, de l'industrie, des postes et des télégraphes).
(Paris, Gauthier-Villars), 1897. 4to. No wrappers. In: "Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences", Tome 124, No 15. Pp. (797-) 838. (Entire issue offered). Becquerel's paper: pp. 800-803. First printing. In 1896 Becquerel made his landmark discovery of radioactivity and in this follow-up paper he further established some of the properties of the radiation so that it could be identified unambiguously.
Erstausgabe
(Paris, Gauthier-Villars), 1897. 4to. No wrappers. In: "Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences", Tome 124, No 9. Pp. (429-) 480. (Entire issue offered). Becquerel's paper: pp. 438-444. A small tear to inner lower margin. Disbound. First printing. In 1896 Becquerel made his landmark discovery of radioactivity and in this follow-up paper he further established some of the properties of the radiation so that it could be identified unambiguously.
(Paris, Gauthier-Villars), 1899. 4to. No wrappers. In: "Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences", Tome 129, No 26. Pp. (1201-) 1296. (Entire issue offered). Becquerel's paper: pp. 1205-1207. Clean and fine. First printing of an early importent investigation on the newly (1896) discovered phenomenon of radioactivity."Toward the end of 1899 (his first report is dated 11 December), he began to investigate the effects on the radiation from radium of magnetic fields in various orientations to the direction of its propagation (in modern terms, the magnetic deflection of the beta rays from shortterm decay products in equilibrium with the radium). In this work he united two descriptive traditions, the magneto optics of his own experience and a line of qualitative studies of the discharge of electricity through gases. He soon moved from these to J. J. Thomson?s more radical program of quantitative observations on collimated beams, in which Thomson had shown (1897) that the cathode rays were corpuscular and consisted of streams of swiftly moving, negatively charged particles whose masses were probably subatomic. By 26 March 1900, Becquerel had duplicated those experiments for the radium radiation and had shown that it too consisted of negatively charged ions, moving at 1.6 × 1010 cm./sec. with a ratio of m/e = 10-7 gm./abcoul. Thus Thomson?s "corpuscles" (electrons) constituted a part of the radiations of radioactivity." (DSB).
(Paris, Gauthier-Villars), 1899. 4to. No wrappers. In: "Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences", Tome 129, No 24. pp. (985-) 1047. (Entire issue offered). Becquerel's paper: pp. 996-1001. 1 textillustr. Clean and fine. First printing of an early importent investigation on the newly (1896) discovered phenomenon of radioactivity."Toward the end of 1899 (his first report is dated 11 December), he began to investigate the effects on the radiation from radium of magnetic fields in various orientations to the direction of its propagation (in modern terms, the magnetic deflection of the beta rays from shortterm decay products in equilibrium with the radium). In this work he united two descriptive traditions, the magneto optics of his own experience and a line of qualitative studies of the discharge of electricity through gases. He soon moved from these to J. J. Thomson?s more radical program of quantitative observations on collimated beams, in which Thomson had shown (1897) that the cathode rays were corpuscular and consisted of streams of swiftly moving, negatively charged particles whose masses were probably subatomic. By 26 March 1900, Becquerel had duplicated those experiments for the radium radiation and had shown that it too consisted of negatively charged ions, moving at 1.6 × 1010 cm./sec. with a ratio of m/e = 10-7 gm./abcoul. Thus Thomson?s "corpuscles" (electrons) constituted a part of the radiations of radioactivity." (DSB).
(Paris, Gauthier-Villars), 1899. 4to. No wrappers. In: "Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences", Tome 128, No 13. Pp. (753-) 852. (Entire issue offered). Becquerel's paper: pp. 771-777. First appearance of Henri Becquerel last paper on radio-activity in the first period, two years after his monumental discovery of radioactivity.
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Bon. de 62 pages Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1879, in-8, de 62 pages, Demi toile verte à la bradel, titre doré,(reliure moderne), Figures dans le texte. Extrait, avec pagination nouvelle, des Annales de Chimie et de Physique.
Verlag: Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1900., 1900
Anbieter: L'intersigne Livres anciens, Saint Xandre - La Rochelle, Frankreich
Verbandsmitglied: ILAB
Erstausgabe
Couverture souple. Zustand: Bon. Edition originale. plaq. in 8°, de 32pp., broché couv. imprimée. Rare édition originale, sous forme de tiré à part, du discours prononcé par Henri Becquerel (1852-1908) à l'occasion du Congrès International de Physique de Paris. C'est l'un des premiers documents sur la radioactivité, découverte fortuitement en 1896 alors qu'il cherchait à approfondir les travaux de Wilhem Röntgen sur les rayons X. Il était alors parvenu à démontrer le rayonnement pénétrant émis par l'uranium, les "rayons uraniques" ; cette découverte sera complété 1898 par Pierre et Marie Curie qui feront, lors du même Congrès, un rapport sur "Les nouvelles substances radioactives". Tous les trois partageront en 1903, le Prix Nobel ; Becquerel pour la découverte de la radioactivité spontanée, et le couple Curie pour leurs recherches sur les phénomènes de radiation. DSB I, 561 - Poggendorff IV, 88.
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Bon. 15 pp., 4 pl. Stockholm, P. A. Norstedt, 1905, in-8, 15 pp, 4 pl, Broché, Rare discours prononcé à Stockholm, le 11 décembre 1903, à l'occasion de la remise du prix Nobel de physique qu'Henri Becquerel partagea avec Pierre et Marie Curie. 4 planches comprenant 20 figures montrant principalement les effets du rayonnement du radium et des sels d'uranium.
Erscheinungsdatum: 1901
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Bon. (4) et 96 pages Paris, Imprimerie nationale, 1901, in-4, (4) et 96 pages, broché, non coupé, Bel exemplaire.
Verlag: Paris Gauthier-Villars, 1901
Anbieter: Antiquariat Gerhard Gruber, Heilbronn, Deutschland
Buch Erstausgabe
(27,5 x 21,5 cm). 1366 S. Halbleinwandband der Zeit. Erste Ausgabe des erstmaligen Nachweises einer radioaktiven Transformation. - "Nothing that Becquerel subsequently accomplished was as important as this discovery, by which he opened the way to nuclear physics. Nevertheless, there were two other occasions on which he stood directly on the path of history: when he identified electrons in the radiations of radium (1899-1900) and when he published the first evidence of a radioactive transformation (1901)" (DSB). - Stempel auf Titel. Rücken ausgebleicht, sonst gut erhalten. - DSB 1, 558.
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Bon. 32 pp. Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1900, in-8, 32 pp, Broché, couverture imprimée de l'éditeur, Rare édition originale, en tiré à part, de ce discours prononcé par Henri Becquerel (1852-1908) à l'occasion du Congrès International de Physique réuni à Paris. C'est l'un des premiers documents publiés sur la radioactivité, découverte fortuitement en 1896 alors qu'il cherchait à approfondir les travaux de Wilhem Röntgen sur les rayons X. Il était alors parvenu à démontrer le rayonnement pénétrant émis par l'uranium, les "rayons uraniques" ; cette découverte sera complété 1898 par Marie et Pierre Curie qui feront, à l'occasion du même Congrès, un rapport sur "Les nouvelles substances radioactives". Tous les trois partageront ainsi, en 1903, le Prix Nobel ; Becquerel pour la découverte de la radioactivité spontanée, et les Curie pour leurs recherches sur les phénomènes de radiation. Superbe état. Exemplaire non coupé. DSB I, 561. Poggendorff IV, 88.
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Bon. 10 pp. et 7 pl. London, 1902, in-8, 10 pp. et 7 pl, Agrafé, sans couverture, Rare plaquette du texte lu par Becquerel lors d'une conférence faite à Londres à la Royal Institution of Great Britain (Weekly Evening Meeting) en présence de William Crookes. Quelques rousseurs sur les première et dernière pages.
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Bon. 15-[1] p. Paris, Didot, 1907, in-4, 15-[1] p, Broché, Rare première édition d'un des derniers textes de Becquerel dans lequel, il tisse un lien entre la théorie de la matière des anciens et celle toute moderne de la physique nucléaire. Exemplaire non coupé.
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Bon. de 32 pages Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1900, in-8, de 32 pages, exemplaire broché, non coupé, Rare tiré à part de ce discours prononcé à l'occasion du Congrès International de Physique réuni à Paris. Superbe état.
Verlag: Paris, Gauthier-villars, 1896, Paris, 1896
Anbieter: Libreria Antiquaria Pregliasco, Torino, Italien
percallina. Zustand: molto buono. in-4 grande (280x234), 1.633 pagine; solida legatura in percallina blu scuro, titolo oro su grande tassello rosso al dorso. Il volume contiene i seguenti studi: "Sur les Radiations emises par phosphorescence", pp. 420-21; "Sur les radiations invisibles emises par les corps phosphorescents",pp. 501-503; "Sur quelques proprietes nouvelles des radiations invisibles emises par divers corps phosphorescents", pp. 559-564; "Sur les radiations invisibles emises par les sels d'uranium", pp.689-694; "Observations relative à une Note de M. Charles Henry, intitulee: a Sur le principe d'un accumulateur de lumiere", pp.694; "Sur les proprietes differentes des radiations invisibles emises par les sels d'uranium, et du rayonnement de la paroi anticathodique d'un tube de Crookes", pp. 762-792; "Observations relative à la reponse de M. Charles Henry", pp. 791-792; "Emission de radiations nouvelles par l'uranium metallique", pp. 1086-1088. Becquerel, Henri (1852-1908) nel gennaio del 1896, assistette a un seminario all'Accademia francese delle Scienze nel quale apprese della scoperta dei raggi X fatta pochi mesi prima da Wilhelm Röntgen. Pensò che ci fosse una connessione tra gli invisibili raggi X e la fluorescenza che osservava nei suoi esperimenti. Iniziò quindi a effettuare una serie di esperimenti per verificare la sua ipotesi che i materiali fluorescenti emettessero, oltre alla radiazione visibile, anche raggi X. Prima edizione di questo importante resoconto "De L'Academie Des Sciences " che comprende alcuni studi di Becquerel sulla radioattività. Lo scienziato condivise con i Curie il Premio Nobel per la Fisica nel 1903. Esemplare in buono stato di conservazione. . Book.
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Bon. , 1877-1885, , , exemplaires brochés, Quatre tirés-à-part extraits des Annales de Chimie et physique et des Comptes Rendus des séances de l'Académie des Sciences : -Recherches expérimentales sur la polarisation magnétique, Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1877, in-8 de 87 et (1) pages ; -Mesure de la rotation du plan de polarisation de la lumière sous l'influence magnétique de la terre, Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1878, in-8 de 36 pages ; -Recherches expérimentales sur la polarisation rotatoire magnétique dans les gaz, Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1880, in-8 de 82 pages et 1 planche ; -Mesure du pouvoir rotatoire magnétique des corps en unités absolues, Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1885, in-8 de 29 et (1) pages.
Verlag: Bureau des Archives, Geneva, 1905
Anbieter: Jeremy Norman's historyofscience, Novato, CA, USA
Erscheinungsdatum: 1883
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Bon. de 68 pages et 1 planche Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1883, in-8, de 68 pages et 1 planche, exemplaire broché, sous couverture d'attente, non coupé, Très rare tiré à part d'une des premières études de Becquerel sur les phénomènes de phosphorescence. Treize ans plus tard, en février 1896, Becquerel découvrira la radio-activité grâce aux étranges "radiations émises par phosphorescence". Très bon exemplaire, sous couverture d'attente.
Stockholm: P.-A. Norstedt & Fils, 1905. Large 8vo. (246x166mm). Original printed wrappers. First edition of Becquerel's Nobel Lecture."Becquerel attended a session of the 'Académie des Sciences' in Paris on 20 January 1896, when Jules Henri Poincaré exhibited a series of radiographs sent to him by Röntgen. He, like others, observed that the emission of X-rays from the cathode tube was accompanied by strong phosphorescence of the glass. He therefore suspected that other forms of induced phosphorescence might be accompanied by other hithero unknown rays. In February 1896 Charles Henry reported to the 'Académie' his discovery of that phosphorescence could be induced in certain substances by exposure to sunlight. In the same month Becquerel reported that uranium was among these substances. Like all his other early papers on the subject, this appeared in the 'Comptes rendus' and was entitled 'Sur les Radiations Invisibles' émises par les Corps Phosphorescents'. In a second paper, 'Sur quelques Propriétés Nouvelles des Radiations Invisibles', he reported the astonishing fact that uranium was capable of fogging photographic plates even without previous exposure to sunlight and when the plates themselves were completely protected from ordinary light. In a third paper, March 1896, 'Sur les Radiations invisbles émises par les d'Uranium' Becquerel discarded phosphorescence completely and declared that the emanations from uranium constituded an entirely new and unsuspected property of matter, which in his seventh paper he named 'radioactivité'. He also found that the uranium rays discharged a gold-leaf electroscope, which is still used as one method of detecting radio-activity.Becquerel also discovered that the residue of pitchblende, a natural uranium oxide, after the uranium had been extracted from it was about four times as radio-active as uranium itself. He therefore suggested to the Curies the importance of further investigations of the ore, with the result that they discovered radium. He continued to work on the subject until 1903, in which year he collaborated with Pierre Curie in a paper, 'Action Physiologique des Rayons du Radium', which is the starting-point of the treatment of disease by radio-active substances. In that year he also published . ('Recherches sur une Propriété Nouvelle de la Matière' - the offered item) . which is his definitive work, containing a chronological narrative of his investigations, his mature conclusions and a bibliography of two hundred and fourteen treatises on radio-activity, dating from his own first paper in 1896. The rays emitted by uranium were named in his honour 'Becquerel' rays. They were later discovered to be a composite of three forms of emanation, distinguished by Rutherford (in 1919) as alpha, beta and gamma rays and identified thus: alpha as helium nuclei, beta as electrons, and gamma as powerful X-rays." - (PMM).In 1903 Becquerel shared the Nobel Prize in Physics with the Curies "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by his discovery of spontaneous radioactivity".
Verlag: Paris Gauthier-Villars, 1896
Anbieter: Antiquariat Gerhard Gruber, Heilbronn, Deutschland
Buch Erstausgabe
(27,5 x 21 cm). 804 S./ SS. (805)-1633. Moderne Halbleinwandbände im Stil der Zeit. Erste Ausgabe der sechs Arbeiten Becquerels zur Entdeckung der Radioaktivität. - "In February 1896 Charles Henry reported to the Académie his discovery that phosphorescence could be induced in certian substances by exposure to sunlight. In the same month Becquerel reported that uranium was among those substances. Like all his other early papers on the subject, this appeares in the 'Comptes rendus' and was entitled 'Sur les Radiations Invisibles.'. In a second paper 'Sur quelques Propriétés Nouvelles.' he reported the astonishing fact that uranium was capable of fogging photographic plates even without previous exposure to sunlight and when the plates themselves were completely protected from ordinary light. In a third paper, March 1896, 'Sur les Radiations invisibles.' Becquerel discarded phosphorescence completely and declared that the emanations from uranium constituted an entirely new and unsuspected property of matter, which in his seventh paper he named 'radioactivité'. He also found that the uranium rays discharged a gold-leaf electroscope, which is still used as one method of detecting radio-activity" (PMM). - Das erste Blatt etwas gebräunt, sonst sauber und gut erhalten. - DSB I, 558; PMM 393; Garrison-Morton 2001 (I).
Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1896. 4to. Bound in contemporary half cloth with marbled boards. "Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences", Tome 122 (Entire volume offered). Two title labels with gilt lettering to spine. Minor wear to extremities, upper title label with a few nicks. Library stamp to title page, otherwise a fine and clean copy. Pp. 420-421" Pp. 501-502 Pp. 559-564 Pp. 689-694 Pp. 762-767" Pp. 1086-1088. First appearance of the six landmark papers in which Becquerel documents his discovery of Radio-activity, PROMPTING THE NUCLEAR AGE.Becquerel was an expert in fluorescence and phosphorescence, continuing the work of his father and grandfather. Follwing the discovery of X-rays by Röntgen, Bexquerel investigated fluorescent materials to see if they also emitted X-rays. He exposed a fluorescent uranium salt, pechblende, to light and then placed it on a wrapped photographic plate.He found that a faint image was left on the plate, which he believed was due to the pichblende emitting the light it had absorbed as a more penetrating radiation. However, by chace, he left a sample that had not been exposed to light on top of a photographic plate in a drawer. he noticed that the photographic plate also had a a faint image of the pechblende. After several chemical tests he concluded that these "Becquerel rays" were a property of atoms. He had, by chace, discovered radio-activity and prompted thee beginning of the nuclear age. He shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1903 with Marie and Pierre Curie. The "Becquerel Rays" were later discovered to be a composite of three forms of emanation, distinguished by Rutherford as alpha, beta and gamma rays.Dibner: 163 (the later Mémoire from 1903) - PMM: 393 (1903- Mémoire) - Garrison & Morton: 2001 (only the first paper). - Magie "A Source Book in Physics" p. 610 ff. - Norman:157.
Verlag: Firmin Didot, Paris, 1903
Anbieter: Jeremy Norman's historyofscience, Novato, CA, USA
Erstausgabe
Becquerel, Henri (1852-1908). Recherches sur une propriété nouvelle de la matière . . . In: Mémoires de l'Académie des Sciences de l'Institut de France 46 (1903). Whole number, 4to. [4], 360, [4]pp. 71 photographic figures on 13 plates. Paris: Firmin-Didot, 1903. 283 x 229 mm. Original printed wrappers, front wrapper faded, some chipping to spine and lower edges. Very good copy apart from some light toning. First Edition, journal issue. Becquerel's definitive memoir on his investigations into radioactivity. Becquerel had discovered this new property of matter in early 1896, while conducting a series of experiments on induced phosphorescence by X ray, sunlight, etc.; he found that uranium was able to "phosphoresce" and fog photographic plates without previous exposure to sunlight. Shortly afterwards, Becquerel "discarded phosphorescence completely and declared that the emanations [from uranium] constituted an entirely new and unsuspected property of matter, which . . . he named radioactivité" (Printing and the Mind of Man). After publishing several papers on the subject, Becquerel wrote the present memoir describing all of his researches and conclusions to that point, and containing an extensive bibliography of works on radioactivity. It was published the same year that he and the Curies received the Nobel Prize in physics for their researches into radioactive phenomena. Becqerel's memoir appeared in two forms: as Volume 46 of the Memoires de l'Academie des Sciences de l'Institut de France, with title-page reading "Memoires . . . Tome quarante-sixieme," and as a separate publication with title reading "Recherches sur une propriete nouvelle de la matiere." The journal article is further distinguished from the separate publication by the presence of "T. XLVI" in addition to the signature number on the first leaf of each signature. Dibner, Heralds of Science, 163. En francais dans le texte 332. Norman 158. Printing and the Mind of Man 393. .
Verlag: Typographie de Firmin-Didot et Cie., Paris,, 1903
Anbieter: Bouquinerie du Varis, Russy, FR, Schweiz
broché. 300x245mm, 360pages, 13 planches en n/b de 33 figures, Couverture supérieure détachée, dos fendu. A faire relier. Intérieure en très bon état, aucun défaut. Sous emboitage. Cet exemplaire attend les soins d'un bon reliure afin d'en être dignement et justement habillé selon son importance historique et son impacte phénomal dans les découvertes scientifiques. En cas de problème de commande, veuillez nous contacter via notre page d'accueil / If there is a problem with the order, please contact us via our homepage.
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Bon. 3 grands feuillets volants Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1907, , 3 grands feuillets volants repliés [650 x 520], imprimés au recto, Sous enveloppe à l'adresse postale de Becquerel, Épreuves d'auteur, remises par l'imprimeur en vue de la publication d'un article devenu très rare, "Sur les électrons", destiné à paraître dans le numéro 65 du Bulletin de la Société internationale des électriciens ; elle comprend de nombreuses corrections et additions de la main d'Henri Becquerel. Après sa découverte en 1896 de la radioactivité, et celle de l'électron par Thomson en 1897, Henri Becquerel parvint, en 1900, à démontrer que les rayons Beta, ont un rapport de charge à la masse très proche de ceux des rayons cathodiques, et donc, en 1902, que ses mêmes rayons sont en réalité des électrons. Les corrections d'auteur rectifient les coquilles et le style du texte, mais elles apportent aussi des modifications importantes de calcul et de mesure. En outre, on trouve aussi des notes marginales, au crayon de papier, ou sur des papiers contrecollés, qui interrogent le texte et certains de ses calculs. Très beau document autographe conservé dans son enveloppe de l'Imprimerie Gauthier-Villars et adressé à "Monsieur Becquerel, rue Dumont D'urville 6. Paris". Cachets "épreuve" apposé par la société d'imprimerie Gauthier-Villars dans l'angle supérieur gauche de chaque feuillet.