Bibliographic Information

Mathematical and physical papers

Lord Kelvin

(Cambridge library collection, . Physical sciences)

Cambridge University Press, 2011

  • v. 1
  • v. 2
  • v. 3
  • v. 4
  • v. 5
  • v. 6

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Note

Author: "Sir William Thomson, Baron Kelvin"-- On originals' t.p.

Editor: v. 4-6, Sir Joseph Larmor -- On originals' t.p.

First published: 1882-1911

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

"Collected from different scientific periodicals from May, 1841, to the present time."-- On v. 1-3

"With supplementary articles written for the present volume, and hitherto unpublished."-- On v. 3

Contents of Works
  • v. 3. Elasticity, heat, electro-magnetism
  • v. 4. Hydrodynamics and general dynamics
  • v. 5. Thermodynamics cosmical and geological physics molecular and crystalline theory electrodynamics
  • v. 6. Voltaic theory, radioactivity, electrioins navigation and tides miscellaneous
Description and Table of Contents
Volume

v. 1 ISBN 9781108028981

Description

William Thomson, first Baron Kelvin (1824-1907), is best known for devising the Kelvin scale of absolute temperature and for his work on the first and second laws of thermodynamics, though throughout his 53-year career as a mathematical physicist and engineer at the University of Glasgow he investigated a wide range of scientific questions in areas ranging from geology to transatlantic telegraph cables. The extent of his work is revealed in the six volumes of his Mathematical and Physical Papers, published from 1882 until 1911, consisting of articles that appeared in scientific periodicals from 1841 onwards. Volume 1, published in 1882, includes articles from the period 1841-1853 and covers issues relating to heat, especially its linear motion and theories about it. Other topics include aspects of electricity, thermodynamics and research relating to magnetism.

Table of Contents

.
Volume

v. 2 ISBN 9781108028998

Description

William Thomson, first Baron Kelvin (1824-1907), is best known for devising the Kelvin scale of absolute temperature and for his work on the first and second laws of thermodynamics, though throughout his 53-year career as a mathematical physicist and engineer at the University of Glasgow he investigated a wide range of scientific questions in areas ranging from geology to transatlantic telegraph cables. The extent of his work is revealed in the six volumes of his Mathematical and Physical Papers, published from 1882 until 1911, consisting of articles that appeared in scientific periodicals from 1841 onwards. Volume 2, published in 1884, includes articles from the period 1853-1856, and puts a special emphasis on the issue of the development of electric telegraphy. Also included is Thomson's Bakerian Lecture on the electro-dynamic qualities of metals.

Table of Contents

  • 64. On the mutual attraction and repulsion between two electrified spherical conductors
  • 65. Remarques sur les oscillations d'aiguilles non cristalisees de faible pourvoir inductif paramagnetique ou diamagnetique
  • 66. On the mechanical energies of the solar system
  • 67. Note on the possible density of the luminiferous medium and on the mechanical value of a cubic mile of sunlight
  • 68. Apercu sur des recherches relatives aux effets des courants electriques dans des conducteurs inegalement echauffes, et a d'autres points de la thermo-electricite
  • 69. On mechanical antecedents of motion, heat, and light
  • 70. Elementary demonstrations of propositions in the theory of magnetic force
  • 71. On the magnetic medium and on the effects of compression
  • 72. Compendium of the Fourier mathematics for the conduction of heat in solids, and the mathematically allied physical subjects of diffusion of fluids, and transmission of electric signals through submarine cables
  • 73. On the theory of the electric telegraph
  • 74. On the electro-static capacity of a Leyden phial and of a telegraph wire insulated in the axis of a cylindrical conducting sheath
  • 75. On peristaltic induction of electric currents in submarine telegraph wires
  • 76. Letters on 'Telegraphs to America'
  • 77. On practical methods for rapid signalling by the electric telegraph
  • 78. On the electric conductivity of commercial copper of various kinds
  • 79. Analytical and synthetical attempts to ascertain the cause of the differences of electric conductivity discovered in wires of nearly pure copper
  • 80. Remarks on the discharge of a a coiled electric cable
  • 81. Velocity of electricity
  • 82. Extract from article 'Telegraph' of Nichol's Cyclopaedia
  • 83. On the true and false discharge of a coiled electric cable
  • 84. On the forces concerned in the laying and lifting of deep-sea cables
  • 85. On signalling through submarine cables
  • 86. On the effects of mechanical strain on the thermo-electric qualities of metals
  • 87. On the use of observations of terrestrial temperature for the investigation of absolute dates in geology
  • 88. On the electric qualities of magnetized iron
  • 89. On the thermo-electric position of aluminium
  • 90. On the origin and transformations of motive power
  • 91. On the electro-dynamic qualities of metals
  • Appendix.
Volume

v. 3 ISBN 9781108029001

Description

William Thomson, first Baron Kelvin (1824-1907), is best known for devising the Kelvin scale of absolute temperature and for his work on the first and second laws of thermodynamics, though throughout his 53-year career as a mathematical physicist and engineer at the University of Glasgow he investigated a wide range of scientific questions in areas ranging from geology to transatlantic telegraph cables. The extent of his work is revealed in the six volumes of his Mathematical and Physical Papers, published from 1882 until 1911, consisting of articles that appeared in scientific periodicals from 1841 onwards. Volume 3, published in 1890, includes articles from the period 1858-1890, the majority of which relate to questions around elasticity and heat, and are accompanied by extensive appendices.

Table of Contents

  • 92. Elasticity and heat
  • 93. On the reduction of observations of underground temperatures, with application to Professor Forbes' Edinburgh observations, and the continued Calton Hill series
  • 94. On the secular cooling of the earth
  • 95. On the rigidity of the earth, shiftings of the earth's instantaneous axis of rotation, and irregularities of the earth as a timekeeper
  • 96. Dynamical problems regarding elastic spheroidal shells and spheroids of incompressible liquid
  • 97. Molecular constitution of matter
  • 98. Five applications of Fourier's law of diffusion, illustrated by a diagram of curves with absolute numerical values
  • 99. Motion of a viscous liquid. Equilibrium or motion of an elastic solid. Equilibrium or motion of an ideal substance called for brevity ether. Mechanical representation for magnetic force
  • 100. On an accidental illustration of the shallowness of a transient electric current in an iron bar
  • 102. Ether, electricity, and ponderable matter
  • 103. Professor Tait's experimental results regarding the compressibility of fresh water and sea water at different temperatures. Compressibilities at single temperatures of mercury, of glass, and of water with different proportions of common salt in solution. Being an extract from his contribution to the report on the scientific results of the voyage of H.M.S. Challenger, Vol. II. Physics and chemistry, Part IV
  • 104. Velocities of waves of different character, and corresponding moduluses in cases of waves due to elasticity, being appendix to Art. XCII sect. 51.
Volume

v. 4 ISBN 9781108029018

Description

William Thomson, first Baron Kelvin (1824-1907), is best known for devising the Kelvin scale of absolute temperature and for his work on the first and second laws of thermodynamics, though throughout his 53-year career as a mathematical physicist and engineer at the University of Glasgow he investigated a wide range of scientific questions in areas ranging from geology to transatlantic telegraph cables. The extent of his work is revealed in the six volumes of his Mathematical and Physical Papers, published from 1882 until 1911, consisting of articles that appeared in scientific periodicals from 1841 onwards. Volume 4, published in 1910, includes articles from the period 1867-1906. Themes covered in this book examine issues relating to water, such as hydrodynamics, tidal theory and deep sea ship waves.

Table of Contents

  • Hydrodynamics: 1. On vortex atoms
  • 2. On vortex motion
  • 3. The translatory velocity of a circular vortex ring
  • 4. On the motion of free solids through a liquid
  • 5. Influence of wind and capillarity on waves in water supposed frictionless
  • 6. Ripples and waves
  • 7. On the forces experienced by solids immersed in a moving liquid
  • 8. On attractions and repulsions due to vibration
  • 9. On the motion of rigid solids in a liquid circulating irrotationally through perforations in them or in a fixed solid
  • 10. Vortex statics
  • 11. On the precessional motion of a liquid
  • 12. Floating magnets
  • 13. On gravitational oscillations of rotating water
  • 14. On the formation of coreless vortices by the motion of a solid through an inviscid incompressible fluid
  • 15. Vibrations of a columnar vortex
  • 16. On the stability of steady and of periodic fluid motion
  • 17. On a disturbing infinity in Lord Rayleigh's solution for waves in a plane vortex stratum
  • 18. On the average pressure due to impulse of vortex-rings on a solid
  • 19. On the figures of equilibrium of a rotating mass of fluid
  • 20. On the motion of a liquid within an ellipsoidal hollow
  • 21. On the stability and small oscillation of a perfect liquid full of nearly straight coreless vortices
  • 22. Towards the efficiency of sails, windmills, screw-propellers in water and air, and aeroplanes
  • 23. On the resistance of a fluid to a plane kept moving uniformly in a direction inclined to it at a small angle
  • 24. On the motion of a heterogeneous liquid, commencing from rest with a given motion of its boundary
  • 25. On the doctrine of discontinuity of fluid motion, in connection with the resistance against a solid moving through a fluid
  • Theory of the Tides: 26. On an alleged error in Laplace's Theory of the Tides
  • 27. Note on the 'Oscillations of the First Species' in Laplace's Theory of the Tides
  • 28. General integration of Laplace's differential equation of the tides
  • Waves on Water: 29. On stationary waves in flowing water
  • 30. On the waves produced by a single impulse in water of any depth, or in a dispersive medium
  • 31. On the front and rear of a free procession of waves in deep water
  • 32. On ship waves
  • 33. On the propagation of laminar motion through a turbulently moving inviscid liquid
  • 34. Rectilineal motion of viscous fluid between two parallel planes
  • 35. On deep-water two-dimensional waves produced by any given initiating disturbance
  • 36. On the front and rear of a free procession of waves in deep water
  • 37. Deep water ship-waves
  • 38. Deep sea ship-waves
  • 39. Initiation of deep-sea waves of three classes. 1. from a single displacement, 2. from a group of equal and similar displacements, 3. by a periodically varying surface-pressure
  • 40. Physical explanation of the mackerel sky
  • General Dynamics: 41. On some kinematical and dynamical theorems
  • 42. On a new form of centrifugal governor
  • 43. On a new astronomical clock, and a pendulum governor for uniform motion
  • 44. On the perturbation of the compass produced by the rolling of the ship
  • 45. On a new form of astronomical clock with free pendulum and independently governed uniform motion for escapement-wheel
  • 46. Elasticity viewed as possibly a mode of motion
  • 47. Steps towards a kinetic theory of matter
  • 48. On a gyrostatic working model of the magnetic compass
  • 49. Gyrostatic experiments
  • 50. On some test cases for the Maxwell-Boltzmann doctrine regarding distribution of energy
  • 51. On a decisive test-case disproving the Maxwell-Boltzmann doctrine distribution of kinetic energy
  • 52. On periodic motion of a finite conservative system
  • 53. On a theorem in plane kinetic trigonometry suggested by Gauss's theorem of curvatura integra
  • 54. On the stability of periodic motion
  • 55. On graphic solution of dynamical problems
  • 56. Reduction of every problem of two freedoms in conservative dynamics to the drawing of geodetic lines on a surface of giv
Volume

v. 5 ISBN 9781108029025

Description

William Thomson, first Baron Kelvin (1824-1907), is best known for devising the Kelvin scale of absolute temperature and for his work on the first and second laws of thermodynamics, though throughout his 53-year career as a mathematical physicist and engineer at the University of Glasgow he investigated a wide range of scientific questions in areas ranging from geology to transatlantic telegraph cables. The extent of his work is revealed in the six volumes of his Mathematical and Physical Papers, published from 1882 until 1911, consisting of articles that appeared in scientific periodicals from 1841 onwards. Volume 5, published in 1911, includes articles from the period 1847-1908. Topics covered include thermodynamic and electrodynamic research, as well as some works on issues of geological physics such as the possible age of the sun's heat.

Table of Contents

  • Part I
  • 96. On the origin and transformations of motive power
  • 97. On the discovery of the true form of Carnot's function
  • 98. Discussion of J. P. Joule's paper on 'A Surface Condenser'
  • 99. Remarks on the interior melting of ice
  • 100. On the stratification of vesicular ice by pressure
  • 101. On the thermal effect of drawing out a film of liquid
  • 102. On the importance of making observations on thermal radiation during the coming eclipse of the sun
  • 103. On the convective equilibrium of temperature in the atmosphere
  • 104. On the protection of vegetation from destructive cold every night
  • 105. On the dynamical theory of heat [thermal dissipation of energy of vibration of solids]
  • 106. On the dissipation of energy
  • 107 Dr. Balfour Stewart's meteorological blockade
  • 108. On the ultramundane corpuscles of Le Sage
  • 109. On steam-pressure thermometers of sulphurous acid, water, and mercury
  • 110. On a sulphurous acid crysophorus
  • 111. On a realised sulphurous acid steam-pressure thermometer, and on a sulphurous acid steam-pressure differential thermometer
  • also a note on steam-pressure thermometers
  • 112. On a differential thermoscope founded on change of viscosity of water with change of temperature
  • 113. On a thermomagnetic thermoscope
  • 114. On a constant pressure gas thermometer
  • 115. On the elimination of air from water
  • 116. On a method of determining the critical temperature for any liquid and its vapour without mechanism
  • 117. On the sources of energy in nature available to man for the production of mechanical effect
  • 118. Acceleration thermodynamique du mouvement de rotation de la terre
  • 119. On the efficiency of clothing for maintaining temperature
  • 120. On osmotic pressure against an ideal semi-permeable membrane
  • 121. On a differential method for measuring differences of vapour pressures of liquids at one temperature and at different temperatures
  • 122. Animal thermostat
  • 123. The power required for the thermodynamic heating of buildings
  • Cosmical and Geological Physics
  • part of the universe
  • 159. On Homer Lane's problem of a spherical gaseous nebula
  • 160. On the formation of concrete matter from atomic origins
  • 161. The problem of a spherical gaseous nebula
  • Molecular and Crystalline Theory.
Volume

v. 6 ISBN 9781108029032

Description

William Thomson, first Baron Kelvin (1824-1907), is best known for devising the Kelvin scale of absolute temperature and for his work on the first and second laws of thermodynamics, though throughout his 53-year career as a mathematical physicist and engineer at the University of Glasgow he investigated a wide range of scientific questions in areas ranging from geology to transatlantic telegraph cables. The extent of his work is revealed in the six volumes of his Mathematical and Physical Papers, published from 1882 until 1911, consisting of articles that appeared in scientific periodicals from 1841 onwards. Volume 6, published in 1911, includes articles from the period 1867-1907. The chapters in the first part of the work focus on voltaic theory and radioactivity, while later ones examine navigation and tides.

Table of Contents

  • Voltaic Theory, Radioactivity, Electrions: 234. On Volta-convection by flame
  • 235. Electrification of air by flame
  • 236. On the velocity of Crookes' cathode stream
  • 237. On the electrification of air
  • 238. Preliminary experiments to find if subtraction of water from air electrifies it
  • 239. Electrification of air and other gases by bubbling through water and other liquids
  • 240. On the diselectrification of air
  • 241. On the electrification of air
  • 242. On the electrification and diselectrification of air and other gases
  • 243. On the generation of longitudinal waves in ether
  • 244. On Lippmann's colour photography with obliquely incident light
  • 245. On measurements of electric currents through air at different densities down to one five-millionth of the density of ordinary air
  • 246. On the communication of electricity from electrified steam to air
  • 247. Experiments on the electrical phenomena produced in gases by Roentgen rays, by ultra-violet light, and by uranium
  • 248. Continuation of experiments on electric properties of uranium
  • 249. On electrical properties of fumes proceeding from flames and burning charcoal
  • 250. Contact electricity of metals
  • 251. Note to 'The electrification of air by uranium and its compounds'
  • 252. Electrification of air, of vapour of water, and of other gases
  • 253. Leakage from electrified metal plates and points placed above and below uninsulated flames
  • 254. Nineteenth century clouds over the dynamical theory of heat and light
  • 255. On the motion produced in an infinite elastic solid by the motion through the space occupied by it of a body acting on it only by attraction or repulsion
  • 256. On the duties of ether for electricity and magnetism
  • 257. Aepinus atomized
  • 258. Becquerel rays and radioactivity
  • 259. Contribution to B.A. discussion on the nature of the emanations from radium
  • 260. On the destruction of cambric by radium emanations
  • 261. Electrical insulation in 'vacuum'
  • 262. Plan of a combination of atoms having the properties of polonium or radium
  • 263. On the statistical kinetic equilibrium of ether in ponderable matter at any temperature
  • 264. Plan of an atom to be capable of storing an electrion with enormous energy for radioactivity
  • 265. An attempt to explain the radioactivity of radium
  • 266. On the motions of ether produced by collisions of atoms or molecules, containing or not containing electrions
  • Navigations and Tides: 267. On the determination of a ship's place from observations of altitude
  • 268. Amended rule for working out Sumner's method of finding a ship's place
  • 269. On a septum permeable to water and impermeable to air, with practical applications to a navigational depth-gauge
  • 270. On the new navigational sounding machine and depth-gauge
  • 271. The tide gauge, tidal harmonic analyser, and tide predicter
  • Miscellaneous: 272. Archibald Smith, and the magnetism of ships
  • 273. H. C. Fleeming Jenkin
  • 274. The scientific work of Sir George Stokes [Obituary notice]
  • 275. James Watt
  • 276. Peter Guthrie Tait
  • 277. Address as Chancellor at Glasgow
  • Index.

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Details
  • NCID
    BB06603611
  • ISBN
    • 9781108028981
    • 9781108028998
    • 9781108029001
    • 9781108029018
    • 9781108029025
    • 9781108029032
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    N.Y.
  • Pages/Volumes
    6 v.
  • Size
    22 cm
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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