Language: English
Published by Yale University Press, New Haven, 2012
ISBN 10: 0300181302 ISBN 13: 9780300181302
Seller: Abacus Bookshop, Pittsford, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
softcover. Condition: Fine copy. 1st. 8vo, 287 pp., First printing of this new edition., The Silliman Memorial Lectures Series. Foreword by Franl Wilczek.
Published by Archibald Constable & Co., 1906
Seller: CASSIUS&Co., London, United Kingdom
First Edition
US$ 1,384.79
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. First UK edition of Rutherford's Nobel Prize-winning investigations on the mysteries of radioactivity. Contains eleven lectures delivered by Rutherford at Yale, in which he lays out the results of experiments with radioactive substances, including the discovery of the concept of radioactive half-life, the element radon, and the differentiated alpha and beta radiation. Published in 1906 by Archibald Constable & Co., two years before his Nobel prize win. Minor wear to the extremities and some spotting, but overall a very good copy of a scarce title.
US$ 519.30
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketLondon: Archibald Constable. 1906. 8vo. Publisher's blue cloth, lettered in gilt to spine; pp. [10], 287, [3], in-text diagrams throughout; spine ends and corners bumped, a little wear to rear board, spine ends restored; some spotting to endpapers; a very good copy; previous owner's signature 'J. H. Bowman' dated 1919, with some of his marginal pencil marks and a couple of annotations, a correction of b to a in blue ink to p. 21, p. 67 has the last pencil mark. First edition, containing the eleven lectures Rutherford delivered at Yale University on the degradation of radioactive substances. His subjects include his discovery of the radioactive half-life, the element radon, and the differentiation of alpha and beta radiation. All these subjects contributed to his winning of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1908. This research was predominantly conducted during his time in Montreal from 1898 to 1907. Previously, Rutherford's research had been focused on uranium, but after his move from Cambridge to the United States, his attention shifted towards other radioactive substances, such as radium and Actinium. He writes in his preface that, since giving the lectures, his understanding of rays has advanced, and the experiments he had since completed incorporated into this publication.