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         Larmor Sir Joseph:     more books (23)
  1. Memoir and scientific correspondence of the late Sir George Gabriel Stokes, bart. .. by George Gabriel Stokes, Joseph Larmor, 2010-08-28
  2. Memoir and scientific correspondence of the late Sir George Gabriel Stokes, bart. .. by George Gabriel Stokes, Joseph Larmor, 2010-08-28
  3. Mathematical and Physical Papers (1880) by Sir George Gabriel Stokes, John William Strutt Rayleigh, et all 2010-05-18
  4. Memoir And Scientific Correspondence Of The Late Sir George Gabriel Stokes V1 by George Gabriel Stokes, 2007-07-25
  5. Memoir And Scientific Correspondence Of The Late Sir George Gabriel Stokes V1 by George Gabriel Stokes, 2010-09-10
  6. Memoir And Scientific Correspondence Of The Late Sir George Gabriel Stokes V1 by George Gabriel Stokes, 2010-09-10
  7. Memoir And Scientific Correspondence Of The Late Sir George Gabriel Stokes - Volume One
  8. Memoir and scientific correspondence of the late Sir George Gabriel Stokes, bart. Volumes I & II by George Gabriel Stokes, Joseph Larmor (selected & arranged by..), 1907

21. Geschiedenis
Alfred Landé, sir joseph larmor (18571942). sir joseph larmor Hendrik Lorentz,James Clerk Maxwell (1831-1879). James Clerk Maxwell, Klik voor een
http://physics.rug.ac.be/Fysica/Geschiedenis/Index.htm
Chronologische informatie Niet-Klassieke fysica: evolutie in de tijd met links naar de cursus Exhibit for APS Centennial Meeting
Atlanta, 1999: Tijdlijn voor de Electronenstructuur van 1890 tot heden Symmetrie in Fysica, Scheikunde en Wiskunde: Tijdlijn Deeltjesfysica: Tijdlijn
Andere informatie Breng een bezoek aan het
Museum voor de Geschiedenis van de Wetenschappen

Hoofd : Prof. Dr. Jos Uyttenhove
Tel.: +32 (0)9 264 49 30
Fax.: +32 (0)9 264 49 73
Email: jos uyttenhove @rug.ac.be
Links naar andere fysica-archieven The Official website of the Nobel Foundation : hier vind je o.a. een digitaal archief van Nobelprijswinnaars Fysica, Chemie, Geneeskunde, Literatuur en Vrede (1901 tot heden). Center for History of Physics (van het "American Institute of Physics") The Galileo Project : leven en werk van Galileo Galilei History of Science Sourcebook : belangrijke wetenschappers van de 15e tot 18e eeuw Radioactiviteit : de ontdekking van alfa- en beta-deeltjes Biografieën (alfabetisch) André Marie Ampère Johann Jakob Balmer Niels Henrik David Bohr Ludwig Boltzmann ... Rudolf F.A. Clebsch

22. Millennium Of Geomagnetism, References HP
larmor, sir joseph, How could a rotating body such as the sun become a magnet? larmor, sir joseph, Possible rotational origin of magnetic fields of Sun
http://www.phy6.org/earthmag/millref2.htm

23. Millennium Of Geomagnetism
from electric currents, and in 1919 sir joseph larmor proposed that suchcurrents could be produced by a selfsustaining fluid dynamo larmor, 1919.
http://www.phy6.org/earthmag/mill_5.htm
A Millennium of Geomagnetism
5. Sunspot Magnetism and the Terrestrial Dynamo
Reviews of Geophysics, (3), p.1-1 to 1-30, Sept 2002 David P. Stern, Laboratory for Extraterrestrial Physics Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD 20771
Table of Contents
Clicking on any marked section on the list below brings up a file containing it and all unmarked sections immediately following it on the list. This list is repeated at the beginning of each file.
  • Introduction
  • Early discoveries
  • William Gilbert
  • Halley
  • Coulomb
  • Oersted and Ampere
  • The Lodestone
  • Gauss and Humboldt
  • Explorations and Surveys
  • Faraday's Lines of Force (field lines)
  • Faraday's Disk Dynamo
  • Sunspots
  • The Dynamo Process on the Sun
  • The Earth's Dynamo
  • Dipole Reversals and Plate Tectonics
  • Magnetic Storms and Ring Currents
  • The Magnetosphere
  • Magnetic Reconnection
  • Planetary Magnetospheres
  • Assessment
    Chronology of Geomagnetism

    References: A-G

    References: H-P

    References: Q-Z

    Back to the index page
    12. Sunspots
    Group of sunspots The story of the Earth's magnetism is strongly tied to that of solar research, in several ways. Large magnetic storms, and observations of "northern lights" far south from their usual locations (i.e. of the "aurora borealis," now commonly known as "polar aurora"), were found to be associated with solar phenomena. And not only did the Sun have a magnetic field, but concentrated sources of that fielddark sunspotswere visible on its surface, quite unlike the sources of the Earth's field which are buried deep in the Earth's core. This led to valuable insights into how the geomagnetic field might be generated.
  • 24. Larmor, Sir Joseph --  Encyclopædia Britannica
    larmor, sir joseph Irish physicist, the first to calculate the rate at whichenergy is radiated by an accelerated electron, and the first to explain the
    http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=9047213&query=calculate&ct=

    25. Entrez PubMed
    The origin of many of the eponymous terms in modern medicine is unknown to manypeople who utter the
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=1

    26. Math Lessons - Joseph Larmor
    larmor, sir joseph (18571942) . AIM25. sir joseph larmor . Rug.ac.be. sir joseph larmor . School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of St Andrews
    http://www.mathdaily.com/lessons/Joseph_Larmor
    Search
    Mathematics Encyclopedia and Lessons
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    applied mathematics mathematical games mathematicians more ... Irish scientists
    Joseph Larmor
    Joseph Larmor July 11 May 19 ), an Irish physicist and mathematician , researched electricity dynamics , and thermodynamics Contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Biography
    2 Awards and honors

    3 Publications

    4 See also
    ...
    5 External links and references
    Biography
    Larmor explained the Fitzgerald contraction independently of Hendrik Lorentz (as he developed the Lorentz transformations in ). Larmor had described the phenomenon of time dilation in " Aether and Matter " (treating this as a dynamic rather than kinematic effect). Larmor was in opposition to Albert Einstein 's theory of relativity (though he supported it for a short time). Larmor rejected both the curvature of space and the special theory of relativity. Larmor proposed that the aether could be represented as a homogeneous fluid medium which was perfectly in compressible and elastic . Larmor believed the aether was separate from matter. Larmor united Lord Kelvin 's model of spinning gyrostats (e.g.

    27. Professor Sir John Meurig Thomas
    Canberra), Liversidge Memorial (University of Sydney), Zussman (University ofManchester), sir joseph larmor (Cambridge Philosophical Society),
    http://www.ri.ac.uk/dfrl/J.M.Thomas/biog_jmt.html
    Professor Sir John Meurig Thomas
    Homepage
    Thomas' current research entails the application of the principles of solid-state chemistry to the atomic design of new catalysts and to their in situ characterisation. Thomas is the author of many texts on heterogeneous catalysis, the most recent (1997), with W.J. Thomas (Wiley-VCH, ISBN 3-527-29239-X), and of a monograph entitled "Michael Faraday and the Royal Institution: The Genius of Man and Place" (Institute of Physics, ISBN 0-7503-0145-7). He is also the co-author or author of over 850 original research papers and reviews. Thomas is the co-founding Editor-in-Chief of Catalysis Letters (1988), Topics in Catalysis (1992) and Current Opinion in Solid State and Materials Science (1990). He is a member of many boards, including that of the Royal Commission of the 1851 Exhibition (Chairman of its Research Committee) and of the NSF Laboratory for Molecular Science, California Institute of Technology. Thomas is the current President (1999-2001) of the Faraday Division of the Royal Society of Chemistry.

    28. Adams, J
    larmor, sir joseph, 168. Lenard, P., 1989. Leverrier, UJJ, 129. Levi-Civita,T., 174. Levin, Bernard, 9, 10, 11. Library of Living Philosophers, The,
    http://russamos.narod.ru/dingle/BIndex.html

    29. PSIgate - Physical Sciences Information Gateway Search/Browse Results
    The site provides a biography of sir joseph larmor (18571942), known for larmorprecession, the larmor frequency, larmor s theorem and larmor s formula.
    http://www.psigate.ac.uk/roads/cgi-bin/psisearch.pl?term1=Larmor frequency&limit

    30. Royal Society | About The Society | History Of Science | Biographies Of Fellows
    Larcom, sir Thomas Aiskew. Proceedings 1879 vol 29 pp xxv. larmor, sir joseph.Obituary Notices 1942-1944 vol 4 pp 197-207, plate, by AS Eddington
    http://www.royalsoc.ac.uk/page.asp?id=2375

    31. Royal Society | About The Society | History Of Science | Past Officers
    1896, sir Arthur William Rucker. 1901, sir joseph larmor. 1903, sir ArchibaldGeikie. 1908, sir John Rose Bradford. 1912, sir Arthur Schuster
    http://www.royalsoc.ac.uk/page.asp?id=1725

    32. RAS LETTERS Lamont—Rutherford - Royal Astronomical Society
    larmor, sir joseph 99,1. LARTIGUE, joseph 55,1. LASSELL, William 40,1; 41,2;43,1; 44,2; 45,3; 47,1; 48,3; 49,1; 51,1; 52,1; 53,1; 54,1; 56,2; 57,3; 58,1;
    http://www.ras.org.uk/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=108

    33. Research & Regional Services
    Applications are invited for larmorUniversity Studentships for 2005/06.These studentships were founded in 1943 under the will of sir joseph larmor, FRS,
    http://www.qub.ac.uk/pao/Larmor-University.htm
    Home News Search Quick Links
    POSTGRADUATE AWARDS
    Postgraduate Office Home Page
    Larmor-University Studentships 2005/06.
    Applications are invited for Larmor-University Studentships for 2005/06. These studentships were founded in 1943 under the will of Sir Joseph Larmor, FRS, for the purpose of augmenting the emoluments otherwise held by specially deserving students. They have since been supplemented from University funds and are therefore now called Larmor-University Awards. To be eligible for consideration, candidates must meet the following criteria: (i) have obtained, not more than three years previously, a good honours degree from any institution; and
    (ii) hold another award from the University or from some other source; and
    (iii) be enrolled or intend to enrol at Queen's as full-time or part-time postgraduate students for research on an approved course. Students who have not yet fulfilled all the conditions of eligibility but who expect to do so before the date upon which the studentships will be awarded are encouraged to apply.

    34. A Brief History Of The Lucasian Professorship
    sir Arthur Eddington. joseph larmor 18571942. Obituary Notices of Fellows ofthe Royal Society, IV197-207, 1942. Howard Eves.
    http://www.math.ohio-state.edu/~nevai/54x/lucasian.html
    A Brief History of The Lucasian Professorship of Mathematics at Cambridge University. by Robert Bruen Boston College May 1995
    ABSTRACT An important Professorship of Mathematick was deeded in December 1663 at Cambridge University, England, as a result of a gift from Henry Lucas, M.P. for the university. The Lucasian Professorship of Mathematics is the most famous academic chair in the world. This is due in no small part to the current holder of the chair, Professor Stephen Hawking, who is a well known theoretical physicist, and Sir Isaac Newton who was the second holder of the chair. What is not so commonly known is that the chair has been held by others who represent the best and most influential minds in science and technology the world has known. As a group, the seventeen men who have held the chair have made a unique contribution to the world. The three hundred thirty years that have passed since its founding have seen a dramatic evolution of science. The Chair represents a microcosm of the world's progress over the last three centuries, from the Scientific Revolution to the world of technology that we know today.
    Introduction
    An important professorship of mathematick , the Lucasian Chair, was deeded in December 1663 at Cambridge University, England. Henry Lucas, a Member of Parliament for the university from 1639 to 1640, left instructions in his will for the purchase of land with a value that would provide an annual income of 100 pounds to support the professorship. King Charles II signed the letter of acceptance of the deed on January 18, 1664 and Isaac Barrow, the first professor to occupy the Chair, took office in February, 1664. He gave the first lecture on March 14, 1664.[Christianson 1984] All undergraduates were required to attend the Lucasian lectures starting in their third year. The Lucasian Chair celebrated the 330th anniversary of its founding December 1993.

    35. AIP International Catalog Of Sources
    Glazebrook, Richard, sir, 18541935. larmor, joseph, sir, b.1857. Coherer (Physics).Ether (Space) Experiments. Browse Catalog. by author
    http://www.aip.org/history/catalog/1007.html
    If you are not immediately redirected, please click here
    My List - Help Browse Archival Resources Archival Finding Aids Books Photos Browse FAQs Past Searches History Home Search: Author Subject Title Journal/Newspaper Title Series Computer File (Software) Title Video Title Refine Search AIP Niels Bohr Library
    Item Information Holdings More by this author Lodge, Oliver, Sir, 1851-1940. Subjects Fitzgerald, George Francis, 1851-1901. Glazebrook, Richard, Sir, 1854-1935. Larmor, Joseph, Sir, b.1857. Coherer (Physics). Ether (Space) Experiments. Browse Catalog by author: Lodge, Oliver, Sir, 1851-1940. by title: Papers, 1874-1912.... MARC Display Papers, 1874-1912. by Lodge, Oliver, Sir, 1851-1940. Description: 30 notebooks, letters. Owning Repository: University of Liverpool. Sydney Jones Library. Department of Special Collections. P. O. Box 123, Liverpool L69 3DA, UK Country of Repository: England, UK Biography/History: Experimental scientist. Born 12th June 1851, Penkhull, Staffordshire, gained exhibition to Royal College of Science, graduated D. Sc. 1877, appointed professor of physics, University College Liverpool, 1881, Fellow of the Royal Society, 1887, Principal of Birmingham University, 1900, knighted, 1902, died 22 August 1940. Scope of Material: Notebooks containing notes taken by Lodge at lectures by Henrici, Clifford; Physical notebooks 1-9 (experimental notes) [notebook 8 contains first use of term 'coherer']; Research notebooks (results, tables, graphs, ether experiments); Index of Papers for References and for Students' notes for Lodge's own lectures, 1885-1895 (incomplete). Letters from various scientists of the day, including A. P. Chattock, G. F. Fitzgerald (Trinity College Dublin), Sir Joseph Larmor (St. John's College Cambridge), Sir Richard Glazebrook.

    36. AIP International Catalog Of Sources
    larmor, joseph, sir, b.1857. Mendenhall, Thomas C. (Thomas Corwin), 18411924.Michelson, Albert Abraham, 1852-1931. Miller, Dayton Clarence, 1866-1941.
    http://www.aip.org/history/catalog/1660.html
    If you are not immediately redirected, please click here
    My List - Help Browse Archival Resources Archival Finding Aids Books Photos Browse FAQs Past Searches History Home Search: Author Subject Title Journal/Newspaper Title Series Computer File (Software) Title Video Title Refine Search AIP Niels Bohr Library
    Item Information Holdings More by this author Morley, Edward Williams, 1838-1923. Subjects Munson, Myron A. (Myron Andrews), b. 1835. Armstrong, Henry Edward, 1848-1937. Baker, Herbert Brereton, 1862-1935. Bornstein, R. (Richard), 1852-1913. Bottger, Wilhelm, b. 1871. Brush, Charles Francis, 1849-1929. Clarke, Frank Wigglesworth, 1847-1931. Dana, Edward Salisbury, 1849-1935. Dana, James Dwight, 1813-1895. Dixon, Harold Baily, 1852-1930. Erdmann, Hugo, 1862-1910. Guye, Phillippe-Auguste, 1862-1922. Hart, Edwarad, 1854- Hempel, Walter, 1851-1916. Herrick, Francis Hobart, 1858-1940. Hicks, W. M. (William Mitchinson), 1850-1934. Higgins, William, Sir, 1824-1910. Jewett, F. F. (Frank Fanning), 1844-1926. Kelvin, William Thomson, Baron, 1824-1907. Langley, S. P. (Samuel Pierpont), 1834-1906.

    37. Faraday, Thomson, And Maxwell
    8 larmor, sir joseph, editor. Origins of Clerk Maxwell s Electric Ideas, p. 3.Cambridge University Press, 1937. 9 Maxwell, James Clerk.
    http://www.cox-internet.com/hermital/book/holoprt4-2.htm
    Essays on
    Consciousness, Physics, and the Holographic Paradigm
    by A.T. Williams
    Part I: Sneaking Up On Einstein
    As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain, and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality.
    - Albert Einstein (1879–1955) Section 1 Section 2 Section 3 Section 4 Section 5 Section 6
    Chapter 4
    Section 2: Faraday, Thomson, and Maxwell
    Clerk Maxwell (pronounced "Clark") graduated in 1854 from Trinity College, Cambridge, with a Bachelor of Arts degree in mathematics. His close relationships with previous Cambridge graduates included William Thomson (1824-1907) (later Lord Kelvin), Professor of Natural Philosophy at the University of Glasgow, and George G. Stokes (1819-1903), Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge. Thomson and Stokes were among the top, if not the top, mathematical theoreticians in England at that time. In a letter dated February 20, 1854, Maxwell asked Thomson for advice in studying the new science of electricity:
    If you have in your mind any answer to the above questions, three of us here would be content to look upon an embodiment of it in writing as advice. William Thomson's education and career had been enhanced and facilitated by his father, James Thomson, who was appointed to the Chair of Mathematics at the University of Glasgow in 1832. Thomson graduated from Cambridge in 1845 at age 21, then traveled to Paris and studied French scientific and mathematical methods. In Paris

    38. Quotations-Page 2
    sir joseph larmor The theory I propose may be called a theory of the sir josephlarmor The whole mass of any body is just the mass of ether surrounding
    http://antigravitypower.tripod.com/quotes2.html
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    The Millennium Prize Math Puzzles - $1,000,000 for each Solution!

    Quotations - Page 2
    There is one thing stronger than all the armies in the world, and that is an idea whose time has come. - Victor Hugo
    In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual. - Galileo Galilei
    In all things it is a good idea to hang a question mark now and then on the things we have taken for granted. - Bertrand Russell
    I didn't think; I experimented. - Wilhelm Roentgen
    May every young scientist remember and not fail to keep his eyes open for the possibility that an irritating failure of his apparatus to give consistent results may once or twice in a lifetime conceal an important discovery. - Patrick Blackett Basic research is what I'm doing when I don't know what I'm doing. -

    39. The Mathematical Association - Supporting Mathematics In Education
    1895 Professor sir joseph larmor MA, DSc, FRS The Mathematical Association 1897Professor A Lodge MA 1899 Professor sir Robert S Ball LlD, FRS
    http://www.m-a.org.uk/association/presidents_page/
    Home Contact Us Join the MA What's New ... Site Map Search: Education Primary 11 to 16 Post 16 Higher ... Feedback to QCA Resources Conferences Local Activities Periodicals Professional Development ... MA Library Association Presidents Page Organisation Who's Who Rules ... Links
    site by acumedia
    Presidents Page
    The Association for the Improvement of Geometrical Teaching
    1871 T A Hirst PhD, FRS
    1878 R B Hayward MA, FRS
    1889 Professor G M Minchin MA, FRS
    1891 Professor J J Sylvester MA, DSc, LlD, DC
    1892 The Reverend C Taylor DD
    1893 R Wormell MA, DSc
    1895 Professor Sir Joseph Larmor MA, DSc, FRS The Mathematical Association 1897 Professor A Lodge MA 1899 Professor Sir Robert S Ball LlD, FRS 1901 J F Moulton KC, MP, FRS (Lord Moulton) 1903 Professor A R Forsyth MA, ScD, FRS 1905 G B Mathews MA, FRS 1907 Professor G H Bryan MA, ScD, FRS 1909 Professor H H Turner MA, DSc, FRS 1911 Professor E W Hobson MA, ScD, FRS 1913 A G Greenhill MA, FRS later Sir George 1915 Professor A N Whitehead MA ScD, FRS 1917 Professor T P Nunn MA, DSc, later Sir Percy 1919 Professor E T Whittaker MA, ScD, FRS

    40. The Energies
    sir joseph larmor; It is not uncommon for engineers to accept the reality ofphenomena that are not yet understood, as it is very common for physicists to
    http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Launchpad/5971/energy.html
    Aurora Borealis Ere many generations pass, our machinery will be driven by a power obtainable at any point in the universe. Through space there is energy. Is this energy static or kinetic? If static our hopes are in vain; if kinetic - and this we know it is for certain - then it is a mere question of time when men will succeed in attaching their machinery to the very wheelwork of nature. Nikola Tesla Modern physics views the vacuum of empty space not as a void but as a plenum of randomly fluctuating electromagnetic fields known as the zero-point energy (ZPE). Harold Aspden
    It is characteristic of fundamental discoveries, of great achievements of the intellect, that they retain an undiminished power upon the imagination of the thinker. The memorable experiment of Faraday with a disc rotating between two poles of a magnet, which has borne such magnificent fruit, has long passed into every-day experience; yet there are certain features about this embryo of the present dynamos and motors which even today appear to us striking, and are worthy of the most careful study. Nikola Tesla
    Electric power is everywhere present in unlimited quantities and can drive the world's machinery without the need of coal, oil, gas, or any other fuels.

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