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Rays of Positive Electricity and their Application to Chemical Analyses

Abstract

ALL physicists and chemists, with many who, though less directly, are yet no less deeply interested in the subjects opened up by the study of the phenomena of the discharge tube, will rejoice that Sir J. J. Thomson has found time, amid his many preoccupations, to bring out this second edition of his well-known monograph on rays of positive electricity. The output of scientific work is now so enormous that it is difficult to keep pace with it even in one's own special line of study. It would be practi cally impossible, if it were not for the assistance given by books such as this, ever to come abreast once more of a subject in which one has once fallen behind. In writing this clear and authoritative account of the present state of a subject which he has done so much to develop, Sir J. J. Thomson has performed a real service to science.

Rays of Positive Electricity and their Application to Chemical Analyses.

By Sir J. J. Thomson. (Monographs on Physics.) Second edition. Pp. x+237+ix pl. (London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1921.) 16s. net.

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C., J. Rays of Positive Electricity and their Application to Chemical Analyses . Nature 109, 671–673 (1922). https://doi.org/10.1038/109671a0

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