In the spring of 1906, Nobel laureate H.A. Lorentz gave a famous
series of lectures at Columbia University. Gathered in one volume
and published as The Theory of Electrons in 1909, these talks are
still widely read and admired today, more than 100 years later.
This collection includes lectures on: . the theory of free
electrons . the emission and absorption of heat . the theory of the
Zeeman-effect . the propagation of light in a body composed of
molecules . the theory of the inverse Zeeman-effect . the optical
phenomena in moving bodies Extensive notes, complete with
mathematical equations, complement the text, and an extensive index
will aid the reader. Dutch physicist HENDRIK ANTOON LORENTZ
(1853-1928) shared the Nobel Prize in physics with Pieter Zeeman in
1902. His publications include The Einstein Theory of Relativity: A
Concise Statement (1920), Lectures on Theoretical Physics (1927),
and Problems of Modern Physics (1927).
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