987 résultats
1975S4404Offprint from:: Physical Review Letters Vol. 34 No. 11 17 March 1975. 1975. 268 x 202 mm. 4to. 707-709 pp. Self-wraps. Fine. Physical Review Letters, Vol. 34, No. 11, 17 March 1975. paperback books
1977S4412Offprint from:: Physical Review D Vol. 15 No. 9 1 May 1977. 1977. 279 x 217 mm. 4to. 2529-2532 pp. Self-wraps. Fine. Physical Review D, Vol. 15, No. 9, 1 May 1977. paperback books
1974S4401Offprint from:: Physical Review D Vol. 10 No. 2 15 July 1974. 1974. 279 x 221 mm. 4to. 539-558 pp. Self-wraps. Fine. Physical Review D, Vol. 10, No. 2, 15 July 1974. paperback books
1975S4407Offprint from:: Physical Review D Vol. 12 No. 9 1 November 1975. 1975. 279 x 217 mm. 4to. 2744-2750 pp. Self-wraps. Fine. Physical Review D, Vol. 12, No. 9, 1 November 1975. paperback books
1973S4397Offprint from:: Physical Review D Vol. 8 No. 9 1 November 1973. 1973. 267 x 201 mm. 4to. 3063-3074 pp. 8 figs. 4 tables Self-wraps. Fine. Physical Review D, Vol. 8, No. 9, 1 November 1973. paperback books
1955S4356Offprint from:: The Physical Review Vol. 97 No. 5 March 1 1955. 1955. 280 x 217 mm. 4to. 12 ff. Mimeographed form. Self-wraps. Fine. In this paper Gell-Mann and Pais report on their work on Neutral K-Particles which was astonishing to those who first heard their results: the K0 and K0 produced in strong production processes are particle mixtures a type of prediction never before encountered in physics!" "In 1956 a year and a half after we had submitted our paper a Columbia University group of experimentalists published a letter reporting that the 'rather startling properties of neutral K's . . . predicted by Gell-Mann-Pais . . . have been confirmed." Pais A tale of two continents pp. 337-339. The Physical Review, Vol. 97, No. 5, March 1, 1955. paperback books
1964S4446Offprint from:: Physical Review Letters Vol. 12 No. 15 13 April 1964. 1964. 267 x 200 mm. 4to. 432-435 pp. Self-wraps. Very good. Physical Review Letters, Vol. 12, No. 15, 13 April 1964. paperback books
1957S4360Offprint from:: The Physical Review Vol. 105 No. 5 March 1 1957. 1957. 267 x 200 mm. 4to. 1616-1619 pp. 2 figs. Self-wraps. Very good. This is the first time a physics paper was submitted for publication in which the ideas of Lee and Yang on p- and C-invariance were discussed. "The question Sam and I addressed concerned a decay mode named Koe3 the decay of a long-lived neutral K into a charged pion plus an electron plus a neutrino. Details need not be of concern here except for our remark that our results are 'independent of whether or not parity is conserved or not . . . and of whether charge conjugation invariance is valid or not in weak interactions.' Obviously we were prepared for either eventuality." Pais A tale of two continents p. 359. "Treiman who had begun his academic career in 1952 as an instructor at Princeton University was now an assistant professor there and has since climbed through the ranks. More important to me is that he has become my best American friend." Pais A tale of two continents p. 359. The Physical Review, Vol. 105, No. 5, March 1, 1957. paperback books
1864M13597New York: Derby & Miller 1864. 1864. Volume II. 8vo. xxxi 1 711 1 pp. Subtle waterstain at top margin viewable from pages 500-712. Original full dark blue-green pebbled cloth gilt spine titles; light wear to extremities. Bookplate of the Essex Institute; small rubber stamp on title C.W. Post College Documents Library. The Emancipation Proclamation declared freedom for all slaves by January 1 1863. This proclamation is dated January 2 1863. Lincoln in writing this one of the most important documents in all US history declared "And by virtue of the power and fpr the purpose aforesaid I do order and declare that all persons held as slaves within said designated States and parts of the States are and henceforward shall be free; and that the Executive government of the United States including the military and naval authorities thereof will recognize and maintain the freedom of said persons." / The War Orders of 1863 are among the most historical during the Civil War. The volume includes: General Orders No.1: Emancipation Proclamation Liberty for Slaves. / General Orders No.100: The Lieber Code How soldiers should conduct ethically themselves in wartime. / General Orders No. 143: Order for the creation of the United States Colored Troops. / General Orders No.1. President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1 1863. With this Executive Order. He took a decisive stand on the most contentious issue in American history redefined the Union's goals and strategy and sounded the death knell for slavery. / Lincoln had always believed slavery to be immoral and fought its expansion. The President took the action "sincerely believed to be an act of justice" knowing that it might cost him the election. / With the Emancipation Proclamation Lincoln dramatically tied the Union's war aims to ending slavery. Whether they approved or not after January 1 1863 Americans could no longer deny that emancipation was central to the Union war effort. / Though ready to lay the groundwork for emancipation Lincoln feared that delivering the Proclamation at the wrong time would doom its chances for public acceptance and harm the Union cause. / On September 22 1862 Lincoln issued his preliminary Emancipation Proclamation giving the South 100 days to end the rebellion or face losing their slaves. / His final Proclamation on January 1 1863 further demonstrated his own evolving views by eliminating earlier references to colonizing freed blacks and compensating slave-owners for voluntary emancipation. Lincoln also added provisions for black military enlistment. Pausing before he signed the final Proclamation Lincoln reportedly said: "I NEVER IN MY LIFE FELT MORE CERTAIN THAT I WAS DOING RIGHT THAN I DO IN SIGNING THIS PAPER." Despite the political risks by 1864 he insisted on both reunion and emancipation as preconditions to any peace negotiation. Though the battle for civil rights would have to follow Lincoln rightly regarded the Proclamation as: "THE CENTRAL ACT OF MY ADMINISTRATION AND THE GREAT EVENT OF THE 19TH CENTURY" Derby & Miller, 1864. hardcover books
1964S4375Offprint from:: The Physical Review Vol. 133 No. 2B 27 January 1964. 1964. 268 x 200 mm. 4to. B477-B486 pp. 1 fig. Self-wraps. Fine. The Physical Review, Vol. 133, No. 2B, 27 January 1964. paperback books
1963S4374Offprint from:: The Physical Review Vol. 131 No. 6 15 September 1963. 1963. 267 x 200 mm. 4to. 2724-2761 pp. 12 figs. 2 tables. Printed wrappers. Fine. The Physical Review, Vol. 131, No. 6, 15 September 1963. unknown books
1953S4350Offprint from:: Proceedings of the International Conference of Theoretical Physics Kyoto and Tokyo September 1953. 1953. 260 x 182 mm. 8vo. 156-163 pp. Printed wrappers. Fine. The paper Abraham Pais presented at the Kyoto and Tokyo conference was reported upon by Time magazine. Pais A tale of two continents pp. 313-314. Proceedings of the International Conference of Theoretical Physics, Kyoto and Tokyo, September 1953. unknown books