EUR 15,55
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: As New. Unread book in perfect condition.
EUR 33,84
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: New.
Da: GreatBookPricesUK, Woodford Green, Regno Unito
EUR 20,77
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: New.
Da: GreatBookPricesUK, Woodford Green, Regno Unito
EUR 22,97
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: As New. Unread book in perfect condition.
Editore: U.S. Department of Commerce / National Bureau of Standards, Washington, D.C.:, 1952
Da: About Books, Henderson, NV, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good EX-LIBRARY copy. Condizione sovraccoperta: No jacket. First Edition. Washington, D.C.:: U.S. Department of Commerce / National Bureau of Standards, 1952. A clean, square, tight copy. Stamped "WITHDRAWN" on the rear endpaper. Pages are unmarked. No underlining. No highlighting. No margin notes. Bound in the original blue cloth, lettered in shiny gold on the spine and front cover. Subtitle: "Proceedings of the NBS Semicentennial Symposium on Low-Temperature Physics held at the NBS on March 27, 28, and 29, 1951." National Bureau of Standards Circular 519. Issued October 6, 1952. Illustrated throughout with graphs, charts, figures, and a few photos. Tables. Footnotes. Bibliographical references. . First Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good EX-LIBRARY copy./No jacket. 8vo. iv, 291pp.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Ottawa, Canada, 1956
Da: ACADEMIA Antiquariat an der Universität, Freiburg, Germania
Membro dell'associazione: BOEV
EUR 20,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloGebunden. Condizione: Gut. Supplementary Number of the CJP. ca. 350 Seiten / pages brauner broschierter Band im Groß-Oktavformat; gut erhaltenes Exemplar mit einigen Illustrationen und Textbeiträgen (well-kept copy issued as a supplementary nimber of the Canadian Journal of Physics) Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 1.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: University Of Toronto Press/ Canadian Journal Of Physics, Toronto, 1956
Da: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Membro dell'associazione: IOBA
Rivista / Giornale Prima edizione
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. 1st Edition. 171-1423 Pp. Original Yellow Wrappers. Copy Of Jan Korringa, One Of The Authors Who Presented At This Conference; Not Marked As Such But With His Place Marker At His Article.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Washington, 1939
Da: Antiquariat Gerhard Gruber, Heilbronn, Germania
Prima edizione
EUR 77,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello(25,5 x 17,5 cm). SS. (55)-111. Mit Abbildungen. Original-Broschur. Erste Ausgabe. - Van Vleck (1899-1980), ein Pionier der Quantenmechanik, erhält 1977 für seine grundlegenden theoretischen Leistungen zur Elektronenstruktur in magnetischen und ungeordneten Systemen den Nobelpreis für Physik. - Stempel auf Einband, sonst gut erhalten. - DSB 18, 949.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Lancaster, 1957
Da: Antiquariat Gerhard Gruber, Heilbronn, Germania
Prima edizione
EUR 374,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello(26,5 x 20 cm). SS. 1109-1355. Mit Abbildungen. Original-Broschur. Erste Ausgabe dieser historischen Veröffentlichung zur BCS-Theorie. - Die drei amerikanischen Physiker erhalten 1972 für ihre gemeinsam entwickelte Theorie der Supraleitung, die sogenannte BCS-Theorie, den Nobelpreis für Physik. - Wohlerhalten.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Lancaster, 1957
Da: Antiquariat Gerhard Gruber, Heilbronn, Germania
Prima edizione
EUR 374,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello(26 x 19 cm). 174 S. Mit Abbildungen. Original-Broschur. Erste Ausgabe der ersten Veröffentlichung zur BCS-Theorie. - Die drei amerikanischen Physiker erhalten 1972 für ihre gemeinsam entwickelte Theorie der Supraleitung, die sogenannte BCS-Theorie, den Nobelpreis für Physik. - Rücken sauber erneuert, sonst wohlerhalten.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: American Institute of Physics (for the American Physical Society), Lancaster, PA and New York, 1964
Da: Singularity Rare & Fine, Baldwinsville, NY, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good Plus. 1st Edition. Lancaster, PA and New York: American Institute of Physics (for the American Physical Society), 1964. First Edition thus. Quarto, light blue printed adhered wraps, pp A 1471 through A 1774 for the series are in this volume.Very Good plus, really quite close to Near Fine; sharp condition. No interior markings. See scan for the rich contents of this issue, but superconducting and magneto-studies pieces dominate. J.M. Luttinger; John Bardeen (the only person to have won the Nobel Prize for Physics twice); Alexander L. Fetter; Miroslav Synek; Kyozi Kawasaki (Boltzmann Medal winner); Michael E. Fisher (Boltzmann Medal winner)(2 articles herein); Herbert B. Callen (Elliott Cresson Medal winner). L67.
Da: THE SAINT BOOKSTORE, Southport, Regno Unito
EUR 20,78
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback / softback. Condizione: New. This item is printed on demand. New copy - Usually dispatched within 5-9 working days.
Editore: American Telephone and Telegraph Company, New York, 1953
Da: Kuenzig Books ( ABAA / ILAB ), Topsfield, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Wraps. Condizione: Good. First Edition. First Edition. 263 pages. Original blue printed paper wrappers. Spine slanted, lightly soiled and worn at extremities. Upper spine corner bumped tearing spine paper and with some creasing. A good copy. Entire issue offered of the Bell System Technical Journal Volume XXXII Jan 1953, Number 1. Wraps. Bardeen, Brattain and Shockley won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1956 "for their researches on semiconductors and their discovery of the transistor effect." The first paper in this BSTJ issue, "Surface Properties of Germanium", is found on pages 1-41 and describe experimental results that confirm "direct evidence for the existence of a space charge layer at the free surface of a semiconductor.".
Editore: American Institute of Physics, 1949
Da: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. BARDEEN, J. and G.L. Pearson. "Electrical Properties of Pure Silicon and Silicon Alloys Containing Boron and Phosphorus", in Physical Review, vol 75 no. 5, March 1, 1949. Highly cited paper with 1030 citations. In original wrappers. VG copy, though with a little chipping at spine bottom. Also bound with H. Alfven, "On the Origin of Cosmic Rays", and Julian Schwinger, "On Radiative in Electron Scattering" and S. Chandrasekhar, "Theory if Statistical and Isotropic Turbulence".
Editore: Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated, New York, NY, 1950
Da: Kuenzig Books ( ABAA / ILAB ), Topsfield, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Wraps. Condizione: Good. First Collected Edition. First Collected Edition. [1], 155 pages. Self wrappers. Blue cloth spine over stapled printed grey, black and blue wrappers. Five holes punched at spine as issued. Several tears to the thin blue cloth at the spine, corner creases. Light browning overall. Reading creases to covers. Previous owner name (R. Warner, 1-118) inked on front cover. Minor edgewear, otherwise a nice copy. One of two variants of this publication, printed on non-glossy paper stock and bulking 9.4 mm thick. "Issued April, 1950" inside the rear wrapper. This variant has reset covers, with minor differences on the front cover illustration lower right (the transistor icon touches the outside of the circle in three places and is simplified, where on most copies we've seen it does not touch the circle edges at all). Wraps. Bell Telephone System, Technical Publications, Monograph 1726. Collects a number of important transistor related papers from the Bell System Technical Journal, Vol 28, pp. 335-489, July 1949. Reprints "Hole Injection in Germanium - Quantitative Studies and Filamentary Transistors", "Some Circuit Aspects of the Transistor", "Theory of Transient Phenomena in the Transport of Holes in an Excess Semiconductor", "On the Theory of the A-C Impedance of a Contact Rectifier", and "The Theory of p-n Junctions in Semiconductors and p-n Junction Transistors." Plus an editorial note regarding semiconductors. COLLECTORS NOTE: The Bell System Monograph series is not an offprint series although it is often incorrectly referred to in this manner. It was rather a publication of Bell Telephone Laboratories used to widely distribute (primarily to libraries and large corporations) research articles written by Bell System employees in a variety of widely dispersed publications (including but certainly not limited to the Bell System Technical Journal). The series therefore represents a much broader selection of Bell System research than the Bell System Technical Journal did. Collectors prize this series as they are often (but not always) the first separate appearance of a paper and hence are the closest one can get to the elusive and ever sought after offprint.
Editore: Physical review, 1957
Da: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Bardeen, J.L., L.N. Cooper, and J.R. Schrieffer. "Theory of Superconductivity" in the Physical Review, volume 108, Number 5, 1957, p.1175-1204 in the issue of pp 1357-1682, in the bound volume for #108, pp 913-1696, for November-December 1957. In a sturdy and attractive black cloth. Provenance: IBM Library, with their name gilt stamped on the spine bottom. Offered with the issues # 4, 5, and 6 bound together. __+__ The Nobel Prize in Physics 1972 was awarded jointly to John Bardeen, Leon Neil Cooper and John Robert Schrieffer "for their jointly developed theory of superconductivity, usually called the BCS-theory", a classic foundation paper of superconductivity and referenced some 13,000+ times.__+__ "The Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer theory (BCS), published in July 1957, proved to be the triumphant solution of the problem which for four and a half decades had stumped all the best theorists in the world."--Dictionary of Scientific Biography__+__ "BCS theory or Bardeen Cooper Schrieffer theory (named after John Bardeen, Leon Cooper, and John Robert Schrieffer) is the first microscopic theory of superconductivity since Heike Kamerlingh Onnes's 1911 discovery. The theory describes superconductivity as a microscopic effect caused by a condensation of Cooper pairs into a boson-like state. The theory is also used in nuclear physics to describe the pairing interaction between nucleons in an atomic nucleus."--Wikipedia__+__ BCS theory, in physics, a comprehensive theory developed in 1957 by the American physicists John Bardeen, Leon N. Cooper, and John R. Schrieffer (their surname initials providing the designation BCS) to explain the behaviour of superconducting materials. Superconductors abruptly lose all resistance to the flow of an electric current when they are cooled to temperatures near absolute zero. --Encyclopedia Britannica__+__ "The turn in the team s work on superconductivity came in the last days of January 1957, soon after Bardeen returned from Stockholm. While riding on a subway in New Jersey, Schrieffer wrote down a promising expression for the superconducting ground state wave function. Recognizing the implications, Bardeen moved the team into an intense period of work in which the three feverishly computed all the relevant experimental quantities, including the energy gap and the second-order phase transition. The Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer theory (BCS), published in July 1957, proved to be the triumphant solution of the problem which for four and a half decades had stumped all the best theorists in the world."--Dictionary of Scientific Biography__+__ See also the very extensive BCS 50 Years by Leon Cooper and D. Feldman, from World Scientific. (Cooper recalls, for example, that when John Bardeen was looking for a post doc to work with him on superconductivity in 1955, that he had never heard of superconductivity before.) Also: see Lillian Hoddeson, "John Bardeen and the Theory of Superconductivity: A Study of Insight, Confidence, Perseverance, and Collaboration", October 2008, Volume 21, Issue 6, pp 319 327| Journal of Superconductivity and Novel Magnetism. .
Editore: Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated, New York, NY, 1950
Da: Kuenzig Books ( ABAA / ILAB ), Topsfield, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Wraps. Condizione: Near Fine. First Collected Edition. First Collected Edition. [1], 155 pages. Self wrappers. Blue cloth spine over stapled printed grey, black and blue wrappers. 5 hole punched at spine as issued. A bright clean copy, one of the best copies we've handled, noting a small bump to the pageblock upper right and a slight three ring binder indentation on rear wrapper. One of two variants we are aware of, this example with glossy paper stock and pages bulking 7mm thick. Both are marked "Issued April, 1950" inside the rear wrapper. No known precedence. Wraps. Bell Telephone System, Technical Publications, Monograph 1726. Collects a number of important transistor related papers from the Bell System Technical Journal, Vol 28, pp. 335-489, July 1949. Reprints "Hole Injection in Germanium - Quantitative Studies and Filamentary Transistors", "Some Circuit Aspects of the Transistor", "Theory of Transient Phenomena in the Transport of Holes in an Excess Semiconductor", "On the Theory of the A-C Impedance of a Contact Rectifier", and "The Theory of p-n Junctions in Semiconductors and p-n Junction Transistors." Plus an editorial note regarding semiconductors. COLLECTORS NOTE: The Bell System Monograph series is not an offprint series although it is often incorrectly referred to in this manner. It was rather a publication of Bell Telephone Laboratories used to widely distribute (primarily to libraries and large corporations) research articles written by Bell System employees in a variety of widely dispersed publications (including but certainly not limited to the Bell System Technical Journal). The series therefore represents a much broader selection of Bell System research than the Bell System Technical Journal did. Collectors prize this series as they are often (but not always) the first separate appearance of a paper and hence are the closest one can get to the elusive and ever sought after offprint.
Editore: American Physical Society (American Institute of Physics), Lancaster, PA and New York, N.Y., 1949
Da: Kuenzig Books ( ABAA / ILAB ), Topsfield, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Wraps. Condizione: Very Good. First Edition. First Edition. [1115]-1338 pages. 10 1/2 x 7 7/8 inches. Original green printed wraps. Bump to the base of the spine panel, some creasing to the covers, minor overall wear, small tear to the bottom wrapper, tiny chip to wrapper corner bottom wrapper, browning and minor tearing to the spine panel. Clean internally. Wraps. We offer the first comprehensive report on the transistor in the Physical Review. This important article was published in both the Bell System Technical Journal and [as here] the Physical Review in April 1949 (no known precedence). In our experience the Physical Review version is more difficult to find than the BSTJ. Both are getting increasing difficult to find in original wrappers. "The first comprehensive report on the transistor [as here], which had been announced in three brief papers published in the Physical Review in the previous year. The transistor gradually replaced the bulkier vacuum tube, allowing heat reduction and miniaturization of electronic deviecs. Transistors began to be employed on a large scale in computer manufacturing in the late 1950s; they were eventually miniaturized and incorporated into microprocessors. Bardeen and Brattain shared the 1956 Nobel Prize for physics with William Shockley.for their investigations of semiconductors (the materials of which transistors are made) and for their discovery of the transistor. " (Origins of Cyberspace) LITERATURE: Hook and Norman, Origins of Cyberspace, #450 (referencing the Bell System Technical Journal publication) COLLECTORS NOTES: This paper was first presented (in part) at the Chicago meeting of the American Physical Society, Nov. 26 and 27, 1948. Shockley and the authors presented a paper on 'The Electronic Theory of the Transistor" at the Berkeley meeting of the National Academy of Sciences, Nov 15-17, 1948. While received by the publishing arm of the Bell Telephone Laboratories Dec. 27, 1948, this paper was first published in April in BOTH the Bell System Technical Journal 28, No. 2 (April 1949) AND [as here] The Physical Review Vol 75, pp. 1208-1225 (April 15, 1949). There is no known precedence between the Bell System Technical Journal appearance and the Physical Review appearance.
Editore: Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated, New York, 1949
Da: Kuenzig Books ( ABAA / ILAB ), Topsfield, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Wraps. Condizione: Very Good. First Separate Edition. First Separate Edition. 18, [2 (blank)] pages. 10 7/8 x 8 3/8 inches. Original blue and gray printed wrappers with 5 hole punches at the spine (as issued). A touch of wear to the extremities, and offsetting to rear panel (apparently from an adjacent Bell Monograph). Front cover clean, rear soiled. Clean internally. Wraps. This paper was first presented (in part) at the Chicago meeting of the American Physical Society, Nov. 26 and 27, 1948. While received by the publishing arm of the Bell Telephone Laboratories Dec. 27, 1948, this paper was first published in April in BOTH the Bell System Technical Journal 28, No. 2 (April 1949) AND The Physical Review Vol 75, pp. 1208-1225 (April 15, 1949). Since no one had yet found an offprint of either the Physical Review or BSTJ papers, we previously documented this Monograph as the first separate edition ("the closest one could get to an offprint of this paper"). But a kind customer just showed us his copy of the Physical Review offprint which is fantastic. Failing the discovery of a similar offprint from the BSTJ, the Physical Review offprint must precede the Bell System Monograph B-1659 offered here, since nearly all papers we know of were published in the Bell System Monograph series later than the BSTJ. We have lowered the price accordingly given the new publishing history. "The first comprehensive report on the transistor, which had been announced in three brief papers published in the Physical Review in the previous year. The transistor gradually replaced the bulkier vacuum tube, allowing heat reduction and miniaturization of electronic deviecs. Transistors began to be employed on a large scale in computer manufacturing in the late 1950s; they were eventually miniaturized and incorporated into microprocessors. Bardeen and Brattain shared the 1956 Nobel Prize for physics with William Shockley.for their investigations of semiconductors (the materials of which transistors are made) and for their discovery of the transistor. " (Origins of Cyberspace) LITERATURE: Hook and Norman, Origins of Cyberspace, #450 (referencing the Bell System Technical Journal publication) COLLECTORS NOTES: The Bell Telephone System Monograph series offered a way to obtain individual articles by Bell scientists regardless of where their work was first published. Many Monographs significantly postdate the original article publication. Because of this, they rarely constitute the coveted (and traditional) article offprint. If the journal of record issued no offprint, the Monograph might be the first separate publication - the closest the collector can come to a traditional offprint. We have done our best to place each Monograph properly in the article's publishing history and welcome any corrections or additional information, especially regarding issues unknown to us.
Editore: American Physical Society, 1957
Da: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condizione: Near Fine. __+__A Great Classic in the History of Superconductivity--the BCS THeory__+__ Bardeen, J.L., L.N. Cooper, and J.R. Schrieffer. "Theory of Superconductivity" in the Physical Review, volume 108, Number 5, 1957, p.1175-1204 in the issue of pp 1357-1682, in the bound volume for #108, pp 913-1696, for November-December 1957. In a sturdy and attractive red cloth. Provenance: National Bureau of Standards Library, with their name gilt stamped on the spine bottom, save for some remnants of the paper spine label, this is a lovely, fresh copy. Offered with the issues # 4, 5, and 6 bound together, with their original wrappers bound in at the end. Each wrapper cover has a somewhat faded and small rubber stamp of the NBS $750.__+__ The Nobel Prize in Physics 1972 was awarded jointly to John Bardeen, Leon Neil Cooper and John Robert Schrieffer "for their jointly developed theory of superconductivity, usually called the BCS-theory", a classic foundation paper of superconductivity and referenced some 13,000+ times.__+__ "The Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer theory (BCS), published in July 1957, proved to be the triumphant solution of the problem which for four and a half decades had stumped all the best theorists in the world."--Dictionary of Scientific Biography__+__ "BCS theory or BardeenCooperSchrieffer theory (named after John Bardeen, Leon Cooper, and John Robert Schrieffer) is the first microscopic theory of superconductivity since Heike Kamerlingh Onnes's 1911 discovery. The theory describes superconductivity as a microscopic effect caused by a condensation of Cooper pairs into a boson-like state. The theory is also used in nuclear physics to describe the pairing interaction between nucleons in an atomic nucleus."--Wikipedia__+__ "BCS theory, in physics, a comprehensive theory developed in 1957 by the American physicists John Bardeen, Leon N. Cooper, and John R. Schrieffer (their surname initials providing the designation BCS) to explain the behaviour of superconducting materials. Superconductors abruptly lose all resistance to the flow of an electric current when they are cooled to temperatures near absolute zero."--Encyclopedia Britannica__+__ "The turn in the team's work on superconductivity came in the last days of January 1957, soon after Bardeen returned from Stockholm. While riding on a subway in New Jersey, Schrieffer wrote down a promising expression for the superconducting ground state wave function. Recognizing the implications, Bardeen moved the team into an intense period of work in which the three feverishly computed all the relevant experimental quantities, including the energy gap and the second-order phase transition. The Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer theory (BCS), published in July 1957, proved to be the triumphant solution of the problem which for four and a half decades had stumped all the best theorists in the world."--Dictionary of Scientific Biography__+__ See also the very extensive BCS 50 Years by Leon Cooper and D. Feldman, from World Scientific. (Cooper recalls, for example, that when John Bardeen was looking for a post doc to work with him on superconductivity in 1955, that he had never heard of superconductivity before.) Also:see Lillian Hoddeson, "John Bardeen and the Theory of Superconductivity: A Study of Insight, Confidence, Perseverance, and Collaboration", October 2008, Volume 21, Issue 6, pp 319327| Journal of Superconductivity and Novel Magnetism.
Editore: Bell Telephone Laboratories, New York, 1950
Da: Kuenzig Books ( ABAA / ILAB ), Topsfield, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Cloth. Condizione: Near Fine. First Edition. First Edition. 675 pages. 8vo. Blue cloth with previous owner name (C. K. Birdsall) printed at base of spine panel and signature on front wrapper of January issue. Bound privately from separate issues, this copy does not have a volume title page. The entire Volume XXIX offered, containing 4 quarterly issues of the Bell System Technical Journal (only the January issue still retains it's original wrappers as often the case). The article by Hamming is found on pp. 147-160 in the April 1950 issue. Sound and clean, noting a taped tear on page 496. Cloth. Volume XXIX contains work by some of Bell Lab's great minds. It contains work by Hamming in coding theory, Pierce on traveling wave tubes, Shannon on Memory sizing, 2 articles by Hartley and Bardeen on Germanium Point Contacts. It also includes articles on the transistor and triode as they were being developed. A few of the highlights follow. "Hamming was the first coding theorist to attract widespread interest in his work.frustrated when a failure in one of Bell Lab's relay comptuers had spoiled a run of data, Hamming began developing the first error-correction codes (now known as Hamming codes), which enabled computers to find and correct single errors in a stretch of data, as well as to discover double errors. Error correction has since been developed into a scientific discipline." (Origins of Cyberspace 646) Pierce's massive four installment article on Traveling-Wave Tubes is found in the January, April, July and October issues. Pierce "invented the electron-multiplier tube and electron gun (the basis of television computer monitors, and other visual display equipment), and was instrumental in developing NASA's first communications satellites" (Origins of Cyberspace 836). Issue 3 in this volume includes Shannon's Memory Requirements in a Telephone Exchange. (Origins of Cyberspace 883). "Charles Kennedy ("Ned") Birdsall, Professor Emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, and a pioneering inventor and educator in microwave tubes and plasma physics.Among numerous awards and honors for his contributions, Ned was selected as the inaugural recipient for the IEEE Marie Sklodowska-Curie Award in 2011. This Technical Field Award is one of the highest awards in the IEEE hierarchy, and recognizes outstanding contributions to the field of Nuclear and Plasma Sciences and Engineering. His citation is "for theoretical investigations and fundamental discoveries involving microwave tubes, electron beam physics and particle-in-cell simulation of plasma physics." (EECS Univ Michigan) Also see Lee,"International Biographical Dictionary of Computer Pioneers", 1995, for more information about Bardeen, Hamming, Hartley, Pierce, Shannon and others. Shannon, Collected Papers, #56.
Editore: American Telephone and Telegraph Company, New York, 1949
Da: Kuenzig Books ( ABAA / ILAB ), Topsfield, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Cloth. Condizione: Near Fine. First Edition. First Edition. viii, 753 pages. 8vo. Dark blue/black cloth with replaced endpapers. Page edges speckled. Spine lettering "Bell System Technical Journal" | "Vol 28, 1949". Ex-libris "P. Caporale" with owner's name lettered on front panel and signature on front pastedown endpaper. This volume includes all 4 quarterly issues of the Bell System Technical Journal for 1949. Original wrappers are not bound in as is often the case. A sound copy. Cloth. Bardeen, Brattain and Shockley won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1956 "for their researches on semiconductors and their discovery of the transistor effect." The first paper referenced here, 'Physical Principles Involved in Transistor Action' is the classic paper on the subject, here in it's original publication format. The same paper was published simultaneously in the April 15, 1949 issue of the Physical Review. This volume also contains a paper by Claude Shannon 'Communication Theory of Secrecy Systems' which was originally published in a classified memorandum 'A Mathematical Theory of Cryptography' in Sept 1, 1945. It was declassified, and published here for the first time publically. There are also other papers on the transistor, and papers by other Bell System researchers. The Bell System Research Labs functioned as a rich incubator during this period, turning out key developments across many technologies. The Bell System Technical Journal is an important journal of record for research in electronics, physics, communications theory, and mathematics. Shannon, Collected Papers #24 (original memorandum publication) and #25 (this publication, which is noted as superceding the original memorandum). Origins of Cyberspace 450.
Editore: American Institute of Physics, Lancaster, PA, 1957
Da: Kuenzig Books ( ABAA / ILAB ), Topsfield, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Cloth. Condizione: Very Good. First Edition. First Edition. [2], 1392 pages. Light brown buckram binding with gilt spine lettering. We offer the entire volume, Physical Review 106 Apr-June 1957. Ex-library, properly withdrawn, with minor markings. Cloth. This volume contains the article "Microscopic Theory of Superconductivity" found on pages 162-164 by Bardeen, Cooper, and Schrieffer who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1972 "for their jointly developed theory of superconductivity, usually called the BCS-theory". This article was the first major published piece related to the theory, which was later discussed in more detail in their major and most important paper on the subject "Theory of Superconductivity" which appeared in the next volume of the journal.
Data di pubblicazione: 1948
Da: Xerxes Fine and Rare Books and Documents, Glen Head, NY, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Condizione: Near Fine. Lancaster 1948. first edition. American Physical Society. Single complete issue of this important journal. Includes work by Oppenheimer ("Note on Simulated Decay of negative Mesons"), Bardeen , Shockley ("Utrasonic Observation of Twinning in Tin") and more. 4to. original green printed wraps. Issue paginated pp. 1135-1276. Near Fine, no ownership marks. only slight cover wear. Seldom seen in this condition.
Da: Herman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, Danimarca
EUR 75,78
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloLancaster, American Institute of Physics, 1949. Lex8vo. Volume 75, March 1, No. 5, 1949 of "The Physical Review", Second Series. Entire volume offered in the original printed blue wrappers. Previous owner's stamp to front wrapper. A fine and clean copy. Pp. 865-883. [Entire issue: Pp. 705-911]. First publication of Bardeen and Pearson's research on silicon as semiconductor.
Da: Herman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, Danimarca
Prima edizione
EUR 103,34
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloLancaster, American Institute of Physics, 1950. Lex8vo. Entire volume offered in the original blue wrappers with previous owner s stamps [C. Møller, Danish physician] to front wrapper. In "The Physical Review" Volume 77, February 1, No. 3, 1950. A fine and clean copy. Pp. 401-2. [Entire volume: Pp. 305-424]. First printing of Bardeen and Pfann's note on the effects of electrical forming. Bardeen recived the Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on the transistor.C. Møller was a Danish physician. He was the author of "The Theory of Relativity", 1952.
Da: Herman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, Danimarca
Prima edizione
EUR 130,90
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello(New York), American physical Society, 1961. Lex8vo. Volume 6, No. 2, January 15, 1961 of "Physical Review Letters", entire volume offered. In the original printed blue wrappers. Back wrapper has some scratches and minor sunning. Otherwise a very nice and clean copy externally as well as internally. Pp. 57-9. [Entire issue: Pp. 47-84]. First printing of Bardeen's paper in which he discusses Tunneling from a many-particle point of view after Giaever (see link below), Nicol, Shapiro and Smith observed the tunneling current flowing between two metals separated by a thin oxide layer. In 1956 Bardeen and Brattain shared the Nobel Prize in Physics with William Shockley "for their researches on semiconductors and their discovery of the transistor effect". In 1972 Bardeen again received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his part in the development of the theory of superconductivity (BCS-theory), and thus became the only person, until this day, to receive the Nobel Prize more than once in the same field.
Data di pubblicazione: 1949
Da: Xerxes Fine and Rare Books and Documents, Glen Head, NY, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Condizione: Fine. Lancaster, PA. 1949 first edition. American Physical Society. volume 76 second series number 9. 4to green wraps. issue paginated 1275-1422. Bardeen article pp. 1403-1405. Fine. no wear, no owner marks. Binding secure; text clean. Bardeen was awarded the Nobel Prize in both 1956 and in 1972 for his work in superconductivity and development of the transistor.
Da: Herman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, Danimarca
Prima edizione
EUR 192,90
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello(New York), American Telephone and Telegraph Company, 1950. 8vo. Original printed blue wrappers. In "The Bell System Technical Journal.", Volume XXIX, October, 1950, No. 4. pp. 469-495. [Entire volume: pp. 469-675]. A bit of sunning to spine and a small tear to lower part of spine. Previous owner's name to front front wrapper. Internally fine and clean. First edition of Bardeen' paper on hole concentration and germanium point contacts. Bardeen is known as the inventor of the transistor, for which he, together with Shockley, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1956. Bardeen is the only person to have been awrded the Nobel Prize in Physics twice, first in 1956 and again in 1972 for his part in the development of the theory of superconductivity (BCS-theory) and thus became the only person, until this day, to receive the Nobel Prize more than once in the same field. Hook & Norman: Origins of Cyberspace, No. 450 (the journal issue). Other papers contained in the volume:1. Morton, J.A." Ryder, R.M. Design Factors of the Bell Telephone Laboratories 1553 Triode. Pp. 496-530.2. Bowen, A.E. Mumford, W.W. A New Microwave Triode: Its Performance as a Modulator and as an Amplifier. Pp. 531-552.3. Hines, M.E. A Wide Range Microwave Sweeping Oscillator. Pp. 553-559.4. Van Roosbroeck, W. Theory of the Flow of Electrons and Holes in Germanium and Other Semiconductors. Pp. 560-607. 5. Pierce, J.R. Traveling-Wave Tubes (Fourth Installment). Pp. 608-671.
Da: Herman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, Danimarca
EUR 206,68
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloLancaster, American Institute of Physics, 1949. Lex8vo. Volume 76, November 1, No. 9, 1949 of "The Physical Review", Second Series. In the original printed blue wrappers. Minor browning to extremities very slight wear to spine. Previous owner's stamp to front wrapper (C. Møller). A fine and clean copy. Pp. 1403-1405. [Entire issue: Pp. 1275-1422]. First publication of Bardeen's paper on diffusion in binary alloys.Bardeen is known as the inventor of the transistor, for which he, together with Shockley, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1956. Bardeen is the only person to have been awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics twice, first in 1956 and again in 1972 for his part in the development of the theory of superconductivity (BCS-theory) and thus also became the only person, until this day, to receive the Nobel Prize more than once in the same field.