Listing 1 - 10 of 44 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Dirac, Paul A.M. --- Physicists --- -Physical scientists --- Biography --- Dirac, P. A. M. --- -Biography --- Dirac, Paul Adrien Maurice, --- Dirac, Paul A. M. --- Dirak, Polʹ, --- Great Britain --- Dirac, P. A. M. (Paul Adrien Maurice), 1902 --- -Physicists - Great Britain - Biography.
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
Thermochemistry --- Thermochimie --- Thomsen, Julius, --- Chemists --- Chemistry, Physical and theoretical --- Thermodynamics --- Heat --- Chemical workers --- Physical scientists --- Biography --- Thomsen, Hans Peter Jürgen Julius,
Choose an application
The story of superheavy elements - those at the very end of the periodic table - is not well known outside the community of heavy-ion physicists and nuclear chemists. But it is a most interesting story which deserves to be known also to historians, philosophers, and sociologists of science and indeed to the general public. This is what the present work aims at. It tells the story or rather parts of the story, of how physicists and chemists created elements heavier than uranium or searched for them in nature. And it does so with an emphasis on the frequent discovery and naming disputes concerning the synthesis of very heavy elements. Moreover, it calls attention to the criteria which scientists have adopted for what it means to have discovered a new element. In this branch of modern science it may be more appropriate to speak of creation instead of discovery. The work will be of interest to scientists as well as to scholars studying modern science from a meta-perspective.
Transuranium elements. --- Superheavy elements. --- Physics. --- History. --- Nuclear chemistry. --- Chemistry --- Philosophy and science. --- Nuclear physics. --- Heavy ions. --- Hadrons. --- History and Philosophical Foundations of Physics. --- History of Chemistry. --- Nuclear Physics, Heavy Ions, Hadrons. --- Nuclear Chemistry. --- History of Science. --- Philosophy of Science. --- SHEs (Superheavy elements) --- Super-heavy elements --- Super-transactinides --- Transactinide elements --- Transactinides --- Heavy elements --- Radioactive substances --- Transplutonium elements --- Transuranic elements --- Actinide elements --- Uranium --- Chemistry-History. --- Science --- Philosophy. --- Normal science --- Philosophy of science --- Annals --- Auxiliary sciences of history --- Chemistry, Nuclear --- Chemistry, Physical and theoretical --- Atomic nuclei --- Atoms, Nuclei of --- Nucleus of the atom --- Physics --- Chemistry—History. --- Science and philosophy --- Ions --- Natural philosophy --- Philosophy, Natural --- Physical sciences --- Dynamics
Choose an application
Entropic Creation is the first book to consider the cultural and religious responses to the second law of thermodynamics, and the theory proposed by certain Christian scholars during the period 1860 to 1920 that the entropic creation argument is proof of a divine creation of the world.
Cosmology --- Entropy --- Second law of thermodynamics. --- Creationism. --- Religion and science. --- Thermodynamics --- Astronomy --- Deism --- Metaphysics --- 2nd law of thermodynamics --- Laws of thermodynamics --- Christianity and science --- Geology --- Geology and religion --- Science --- Science and religion --- Creation science --- Scientific creationism --- Modernist-fundamentalist controversy --- Bible and evolution --- Creation --- Evolution (Biology) --- Intelligent design (Teleology) --- Religious aspects --- History. --- Philosophy --- History --- Religious aspects. --- Philosophy. --- Christianity --- Cosmologie --- Entropie --- Deuxième principe de la thermodynamique --- Créationnisme --- Religion et sciences --- Aspect religieux --- Philosophie --- Histoire --- Second law of thermodynamics --- Creationism --- Religion and science
Choose an application
The main focus of this book is on the interconnection of two unorthodox scientific ideas, the varying-gravity hypothesis and the expanding-earth hypothesis. As such, it provides a fascinating insight into a nearly forgotten chapter in both the history of cosmology and the history of the earth sciences. The hypothesis that the force of gravity decreases over cosmic time was first proposed by Paul Dirac in 1937. In this book the author examines in detail the historical development of Dirac’s hypothesis and its consequences for the structure and history of the earth, the most important of which was that the earth must have been smaller in the past.
Mathematics --- Cosmology --- Geophysics --- History --- geschiedenis --- wiskunde --- geofysica --- kosmologie
Choose an application
The story of superheavy elements - those at the very end of the periodic table - is not well known outside the community of heavy-ion physicists and nuclear chemists. But it is a most interesting story which deserves to be known also to historians, philosophers, and sociologists of science and indeed to the general public. This is what the present work aims at. It tells the story or rather parts of the story, of how physicists and chemists created elements heavier than uranium or searched for them in nature. And it does so with an emphasis on the frequent discovery and naming disputes concerning the synthesis of very heavy elements. Moreover, it calls attention to the criteria which scientists have adopted for what it means to have discovered a new element. In this branch of modern science it may be more appropriate to speak of creation instead of discovery. The work will be of interest to scientists as well as to scholars studying modern science from a meta-perspective.
Philosophy of science --- Pure sciences. Natural sciences (general) --- History of physics --- Nuclear physics --- History of chemistry --- Nuclear chemistry --- Chemistry --- History --- stralingschemie --- wetenschapsgeschiedenis --- quarks --- deeltjesfysica --- chemie --- geschiedenis --- wetenschapsfilosofie --- fysica --- atoomfysica
Choose an application
Niels Bohr's atomic theory of 1913 is one of the absolute highlights in the history of modern science. It was only with this work that physicists realized that quantum theory is an essential ingredient in atomic physics, and it was also only with this work that Rutherford's nuclear model dating from 1911 was transformed into a proper theory of atomic structure. In a longer perspective, Bohr's quantum atom of 1913 gave rise to the later Heisenberg-Schrödinger quantum mechanics and all its marvellous consequences. This book is a detailed account of the origin of the Bohr atom centred around his original scientific articles of 1913 which are here reproduced and provided with the necessary historical background. In addition to the so-called trilogy - the three papers published in Philosophical Magazine - also two other and less well-known yet important papers are included. The present work starts with a condensed biographical account of Bohr's life and scientific career, from his birth in Copenhagen in 1885 to his death in the same city 77 years later. It then proceeds with a chapter outlining earlier ideas of atomic structure and tracing Bohr's route from his doctoral dissertation in 1911 over his stays in Cambridge and Manchester to the submission in April 1913 of the first part of the trilogy. The reproduction of Bohr's five articles is followed by notes and comments directly related to the texts, with the aim of clarifying some of the textual passages and to explicate names and subjects that may not be clear or well known. The reception of Bohr's radically new theory by contemporary physicists and chemists is discussed in a final chapter, which deals with the immediate reactions to Bohr's theory 1913-1915 mostly among British, German and American scientists. Historians of science have long been occupied with Bohr's atomic theory, which was the subject of careful studies in connection with its centenary in 2013. The present work offers an extensive source-based account of the original theory aimed at a non-specialist audience with an interest in the history of physics and the origin of the quantum world. In 1922 Bohr was awarded the Nobel Prize for his theory. The coming centenary will undoubtedly cause an increased interest in how he arrived at his revolutionary picture of the constitution of atoms and molecules.
Pure sciences. Natural sciences (general) --- wetenschapsgeschiedenis --- Physicists --- Quantum theory --- Teoria quàntica --- Història --- Físics --- History. --- Bohr, Niels, --- Dinamarca --- Història.
Listing 1 - 10 of 44 | << page >> |
Sort by
|