Bibliographic Information

Scientific papers

by Baron John William Strutt Rayleigh

(Cambridge library collection, . Mathematical sciences)

Cambridge University Press, 2009

  • v. 1. 1869-1881 : pbk
  • v. 2. 1881-1887 : pbk
  • v. 3. 1887-1892 : pbk
  • v. 4. 1892-1901 : pbk
  • v. 5. 1902-1910 : pbk
  • v. 6. 1911-1919 : pbk

Available at  / 4 libraries

  • Kyoto University Library

    v. 1. 1869-1881 : pbkMC||21||R3||1200017003688, v. 2. 1881-1887 : pbkMC||21||R3||2200017003697, v. 3. 1887-1892 : pbkMC||21||R3||3200017003705, v. 4. 1892-1901 : pbkMC||21||R3||4200017003714, v. 5. 1902-1910 : pbkMC||21||R3||5200017003723, v. 6. 1911-1919 : pbkMC||21||R3||6200017003732

  • Saitama Institute of Technology Library

    v. 1. 1869-1881 : pbk420.8-R190148684

  • Tokyo Institute of Technology Ookayama Library

    v. 1. 1869-1881 : pbk420.8/R/1300159885, v. 2. 1881-1887 : pbk420.8/R/2300166423, v. 3. 1887-1892 : pbk420.8/R/3300163262, v. 4. 1892-1901 : pbk420.8/R/4300163211, v. 5. 1902-1910 : pbk420.8/R/530016644X, v. 6. 1911-1919 : pbk420.8/R/6300166431

  • Ritsumeikan University Main Library

    v. 1. 1869-1881 : pbk11002059471, v. 2. 1881-1887 : pbk11002059483, v. 3. 1887-1892 : pbk11002059495, v. 4. 1892-1901 : pbk11002059501, v. 5. 1902-1910 : pbk11002059513, v. 6. 1911-1919 : pbk11002059525

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Note

"This digitally printed version 2009"--T.p. verso

Reprint. Originally published: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1899-1920

Includes bibliographical references

Includes indexes (v. 4, v. 6)

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

v. 1. 1869-1881 : pbk ISBN 9781108005425

Description

Lord Rayleigh (1842-1919) won the Nobel Prize for physics in 1904. His early research was in optics and acoustics but his first published paper, from 1869, was an explanation of Maxwell's electromagnetic theory. In 1871, he related the degree of light scattering to wavelength (part of the explanation for why the sky is blue), and in 1872 he wrote his classic Theory of Sound (not included here). He became a Fellow of the Royal Society and inherited his father's peerage in 1873. Rayleigh nevertheless continued groundbreaking research, including the first description of Moire interference (1874). In 1881, while president of the London Mathematical Society (1878-1880) and successor to Maxwell as Cavendish Professor of Experimental Physics at Cambridge (1879-1884), Rayleigh published a paper on diffraction gratings which led to improvements in the spectroscope and future developments in high-resolution spectroscopy. This volume contains papers from 1869 to 1881.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Scientific papers 1-78.
Volume

v. 2. 1881-1887 : pbk ISBN 9781108005432

Description

As Cavendish Professor of Experimental Physics at Cambridge University, Lord Rayleigh focussed his considerable energies on the study of electricity - building on the work of his illustrious predecessor, James Clerk Maxwell. This second volume of his papers, covering 1881-7, includes a series of four major contributions from 1881 and 1883 concerning the absolute determination of the ohm. Related reports include the measurement of current, and the electrical properties of various materials. A note from 1884 pessimistically predicts an absolute practical limit of less than 50 miles for a working telephone cable. In 1884, Rayleigh stepped down from his post as Cavendish Professor but continued his research work from his private laboratory. He proposed the existence of surface waves in a paper of 1885. These 'Rayleigh waves' roll along the surface of the earth and are responsible for producing most of the shaking experienced in an earthquake.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Scientific papers 79-141.
Volume

v. 3. 1887-1892 : pbk ISBN 9781108005449

Description

This volume includes papers from 1887, when Lord Rayleigh became Professor of Natural Philosophy at the Royal Institution in London, to 1892. An 1888 contribution on the densities of hydrogen and oxygen led to a series of experiments on the densities of the atmospheric gases. This resulted in the unsettling discovery that the density of atmospheric nitrogen seemed very slightly to exceed the density of nitrogen derived from its chemical compounds. A substantial 1888 paper, on the wave theory of light, was written for the Encyclopaedia Britannica in the immediate aftermath of the crucial Michelson-Morley experiment in which the speed of light had been measured. In addition, this wide-ranging volume shows Rayleigh's developing interest in the properties of liquid surfaces, with a discourse on foams (1890), and a paper on surface films (1892). It also includes a charming brief appreciation (1890) of James Clerk Maxwell's legacy to science.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Scientific papers 142-196.
Volume

v. 4. 1892-1901 : pbk ISBN 9781108005456

Description

This volume of Lord Rayleigh's collected papers begins with a brief 1892 piece in which the author addresses the troubling discrepancies between the apparent density of nitrogen derived from different sources. Intrigued by this anomaly and by earlier observations by Cavendish, Rayleigh investigated whether it might be due to a previously undiscovered atmospheric constituent. This led to Rayleigh's discovery of the chemically inert element, argon, to his 1904 Nobel Prize in physics, and to the discovery of all the 'rare' gases. Debate over the nature of Roentgen rays, is reflected in a short 1898 paper, written in the wake of their discovery. 1900 saw a key contribution, the elegant description of the distribution of longer wavelengths in blackbody radiation. Now known as the Rayleigh-Jeans' Law, this complemented Wien's equation describing the shorter wavelengths. Planck's law combined these, in a crucial step toward the eventual development of quantum mechanics.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Scientific papers 197-272
  • classified table of contents of vols. 1-4
  • Index.
Volume

v. 5. 1902-1910 : pbk ISBN 9781108005463

Description

Lord Rayleigh served as President of Royal Society from 1905 to 1908, when he became Chancellor of the University of Cambridge. In 1904 he was awarded a Nobel Prize. He received the physics award while Ramsey, with whom he had conducted the research and announced the discovery of argon, received the Nobel Prize for chemistry. In 1906 he published his electron fluid model of the atom, a modification of Thomson's 'plum pudding' proposal. This was superseded by a series of other (also invalid) models, until Bohr's atomic theory of 1913. In 1907 Rayleigh published a detailed observational study on how humans can perceive sound and distinguish the directions of pure and complex tones. His interest in optics also continued, with a 1907 analysis of the theoretical basis for unusual banding patterns arising when polarised light was shone on diffraction gratings. This volume includes his papers from 1902 to 1910.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Scientific papers 273-349.
Volume

v. 6. 1911-1919 : pbk ISBN 9781108005470

Description

This final volume of papers by Lord Rayleigh covers the period from 1911 to his death in 1919. The first of the Solvay Conferences in 1911 played a key role in the foundation of quantum theory. Although invited, Rayleigh did not attend. His principal achievements lay in development and consolidation across classical physics, in which he continued to work. In a 1917 paper, he used electromagnetic theory to derive a formula for expressing the reflection properties from a regularly stratified medium. In 1919, he investigated the iridescent colours of birds and insects. Rayleigh continued his long-standing participation in the Society for Psychical Research, founded in 1882 for the study of 'debatable phenomena'. One of his last publications was his presidential address to that society, which considers several highly unorthodox views and practices. He concludes by asserting the importance to scientists of maintaining open minds in the pursuit of truth.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Scientific papers 350-446
  • Table of contents of volumes 1-6
  • Index of names.

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Details

  • NCID
    BB02231275
  • ISBN
    • 9781108005425
    • 9781108005432
    • 9781108005449
    • 9781108005456
    • 9781108005463
    • 9781108005470
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Cambridge [England]
  • Pages/Volumes
    v.
  • Size
    25 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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