THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS. 13 



ELEMENTS OF NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. 

 By Professors Sir W. THOMSON and P. G. TAIT. Part I. Demy 8vo. 

 cloth. Second Edition. 9^. 



"This work is designed especially for the trigonometry. Tiros in Natural Philosophy 



use of schools and junior classes in the Uni- cannot be better directed than by being told 



versities, the mathematical methods being to give their diligent attention to an intel- 



limited almost without exception to those of ligent digestion of the contents of this excel- 



the most elementary geometry, algebra, and lent vade mecum." Iron. 



A TREATISE ON THE THEORY OF DETER- 

 MINANTS AND THEIR APPLICATIONS IN ANALYSIS 

 AND GEOMETRY, by ROBERT FORSYTH SCOTT, M.A., of 

 St John's College, Cambridge. Demy 8vo. 12s. 



" This able and comprehensive treatise ture of the subject than Mr Scott to express 



will be welcomed by the student as bringing an opinion as to the amount of his own re- 



within his reach the results of many impor- search contained in this work, but all will 



tant researches on this subject which have appreciate the skill with which the results 



hitherto been for the most part inaccessible of his industrious reading have been arranged 



to him It would be presumptuous on into this interesting treatise." Atheitcfum. 



the part of any one less learned in the litera- 



HYDRODYNAMICS, 



A Treatise on the Mathematical Theory of the Motion of Fluids, by 

 HORACE LAMB, M.A., formerly Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge ; 

 Professorof Mathematics in the University of Adelaide. DemySvo. 12s- 



THE ANALYTICAL THEORY OF HEAT, 



By JOSEPH FOURIER. Translated, with Notes, by A. FREEMAN, M.A. 

 Fellow of St John's College, Cambridge. Demy 8vo. i6s. 



" It is time that Fourier's masterpiece, value and importance of the Theorie de la 

 The Analytical Theory of Heat, trans- Chaleur. It has been called 'an exquisite 

 lated by Mr Alex. Freeman, should be in- mathematical poem,' not once but many times, 

 troduced to those English students of Mathe- independently, by mathematicians of different 

 matics who do not follow with freedom a schools. Many of the very greatest of mo- 

 treatise in any language but their own. It dern mathematicians regard it, justly, as the 

 is a model of mathematical reasoning applied key which first opened to them the treasure- 

 to physical phenomena, and is remarkable for house of mathematical physics. It is still the 

 the ingenuity of the analytical process em- text-book of Heat Conduction, and there 

 ployed by the author." Contemporary seems little present prospect of its being 

 Review, October, 1878. superseded, though it is already more than 



"There cannot be two opinions as to the half a century old." Nature. 



THE ELECTRICAL RESEARCHES OF THE 

 HONOURABLE HENRY CAVENDISH, F.R.S. 



Written between 1771 and 1781, Edited from the original manuscripts 

 in the possession of the Duke of Devonshire, K. G., by J. CLERK 

 MAXWELL, F.R.S. Demy 8vo. cloth. i8s. 



"This work, which derives a melancholy . . . Every department of editorial duty 



interest from the lamented death of the editor appears to have been most conscientiously 



following so closely upon its publication, is a performed ; and it must have been no small 



valuable addition to the history of electrical satisfaction to Prof. Maxwell to see this 



research. ... The papers themselves are most goodly volume completed before his life's 



carefully reproduced, with fac-similes of the work was done." At/ien&um. 

 author's sketches of experimental apparatus. 



AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON QUATERNIONS, 



By P. G. TAIT, M.A., Professor of Natural Philosophy in the Univer- 

 sity of Edinburgh. Second Edition. Demy 8vo. 14^. 



London: Cambridge Warehouse, 17 Paternoster Row. 



