cxl NATURE [Au£us^ 21, iSyg 



NEW PUBLICATIONS t^h^. CAMBRIDGE UNIVER8ITYpRE88. 



THE ELECTRICAL RESEARCHES OF THE 



- HONOURABLE HENRY CAVENDISH, RR.S. 



]Vritten between 1771 a/id 1781. Edited from the Original Manuscripts in the possession of the 



Duke of Devonshire, K.G., 



BY J. CLERK MAXWELL, F.R.S. 



H Y D ROD Y N A M I C S, 



A TREATISE ON THE MATHEMATICAL THEORY OF FLUID MOTION. 



BY HORACE LAMB, M.A., 



Formerly Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge; Professor of Mathematics in the University of Adelaide. 



A TREATISE ON NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. 



BY SIR W. THOMSON, LL.D., D.C.L., F.R.S., 



rvofe?sor of Natural Philosophy in the University of Glasgow, Fellow of St Peter's College, Cambridge ; and 



P. G. TAIT, M.A., 



Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University of Edinburgh; formerly Fellow of St. Peter's College. 



Vol. I. Part I. Demy Octavo. \(>s. 



" In thi«, the second edition, we notice a large amount of new matter, the importance of which is such that any opinii 

 ■svhich-we could form within the time at our disposal would be utterly inadequate." — Nature. 



ELEMENTS OF NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. 



BY PROFESSORS SIR W. THOMSON AND P. G. TAIT. 



Part I. 8vo, cloth. SECOND EDITION, gj. 



AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON 

 QUATERNIONS. 



BY P. G. TAIT, M.A., 



Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University of Edinburgh ; formerly Fellow of St. Peter's College, Cambridge. 



SECOND EDITION. Demy 8vo. 14J. 



THE ANALYTICAL THEORY OF HEAT. 



BY JOSEPH FOURIER. 



Translated, with Notes, by A. FREEMAN, M.A., Fellow of St. John's Collie, Cambridge. 



Demy 8vo. i6i'. 



" There cannot be tv/o opinions as to the value and importance of the 'Theorie de la Chaleur.' It has been called 'an 

 exquisite mathematical poem,' not once, but many times, independently, by mathematicians of different schools. Many of the 

 very greatest of modern mathematicians regard it, justly, as the key which first opened to them the treasure-house of mathematical 

 ))hyi-ics. It is still the text-book of Heat Conduction, and there seems little present prospect of its being superseded, though it is 

 already more than half a century old." — Nature. 



I 



ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATIONS 



MADE AT THE OBSERVATORY AT CAMBRIDGE IN THE YEARS 1861 to 1865. 



IN THE PRESS. 



MATHEMATICAL AND PHYSICAL PAPERS. 



BY GEORGE GABRIEL STOKES, M.A., D.C.L.. LL.D., F.R.S., 



Fellow of Pembroke College and Lucasian Professor of Mathematic=. 

 Reprinted from the Original Journals and Transactions, with Additional Notes by the Author. 



LONDON: CAMBRIDGE WAREHOUSE, 17 PATERNOSTER ROW. 



Printed by R. Clav. Sons, and Tavlok, at 7 and 8, Mread Street Hill, (^uecn Victoria Street, in tke City of London, and published by 

 Macmillan and Co., at the t>ffice. 29 and 30, Bedford Street, Covent Garden.— Thuksday, August 21, 1879. 



