CAMBRID GE UNIVERSIT Y PRESS 



SIR GEORGE STOKES: MEMOIR AND SCIENTIFIC 



CORRESPONDENCE. Selected and Arranged by JOSEPH LARMOR, F.R.S. 



Demy 8vo In addition to the scientific correspondence, the book contains apprecia- 



9 vftlft 4. tilates tions by Professor G. D. Liveing, the late Sir Michael Foster, Sir W. Huggins 

 z vois * pta-tea ^ ^ Bish of Bristol( and a memoir by Mrs. Laurence Humphry. 



24s net , , These volumes form a valuable supplement to the five volumes of 



Stokes's scientific papers which have already been issued, and no scientific 

 library can afford to do without them. As a monument to Stokes's great 

 powers of mind, they are a worthy record of the man, and do credit to 

 Professor Larmor's editorial ability."— Tribune. 



"A worthy memorial of one of the most famous mathematicians and 

 physicists of our time." — Daily Graphic. 



MATHEMATICAL AND PHYSICAL PAPERS. By Sir 



GEORGE STOKES, Sc.D., F.R.S. 



Demy 8vo These papers are reprinted from the original Journals and Transactions 



5 vols ^ th brief nistorica ] no tes and references. 



15s each 



RADIO-ACTIVITY. By E. Rutherford, D.Sc, F.R.S., 



Macdonald Professor of Physics, McGill University, Montreal. Second edition, 

 revised and enlarged. 



Demy 8vo The re- arrangement in this edition is so extensive as to constitute almost 



is><s firi net a new work. , ... 



lass o« n«b . ( professor Rut herford's book has no rival as an authoritative exposition 



of what is known of the properties of radio-active bodies. A very large share 

 of that knowledge is due to the author himself. His amazing activity in this 

 field has excited universal admiration."— Nature. 



"We cordially commend this book both to the expert, to whom the 

 possession of it is a necessity, and to the amateur reader or speculator, who, 

 if not already acquainted with it, will be surprised at the ease with which it 

 will enable him to enter into a real knowledge of this fascinating subject. — 

 Knowledge. 



CONDUCTION OF ELECTRICITY THROUGH GASES. 



By J. J. THOMSON, D.Sc, F.R.S., Cavendish Professor of Experimental Physics, 

 Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. Second edition, revised. 



Demy 8vo This, the second edition, has been remodelled and partly rewritten, and 



mm may be described as practically a new book. 



los •■ We desire to emphasise the exceeding value of this work, the immense 



care to bring forward and describe experimental results that have a true 

 bearing upon the subject, and the exhaustive and luminous way in which the 

 whole is put before the student."— Electrical Engineer. 



" This book . . . will be welcomed by all those who are striving to keep 

 up with the rapidly growing literature on an increasingly important subject. 

 It was the author's researches in this field which first paved the way for the 

 rapid extension of our knowledge which has taken place m the last few 

 years. ' ' — Nature, 



THE THEORY OF ALTERNATING CURRENTS. By 



ALEXANDER RUSSELL, M.A., M.I.E.E., Lecturer and Consultant, Faraday 

 House, London. In two volumes— Yol. II. 



Demv 8vo "The merit of Mr. Russell's treatise is that it brings in the results of 



Volume II the work of all the greatest scientific electricians, and deals m the light of the 

 12s net most advanced knowledge with several of the more difficult problems that 



(Vol. I 12s net) arise in practical work."— Scotsman. 



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