Katherine Brading and Marius Stan provide a new framing of natural philosophy and its transformations in the Enlightenment and propose an account of how physics and philosophy evolved into distinct fields of inquiry.
"Microextraction techniques in analytical toxicology" provides the information readers need to include about cutting-edge sample preparation techniques into their everyday analytical practice, including comprehensive information about principle.
This book develops the theory of rare events for both classical uncorrelated as well as correlated sequences in terms of simple models and examples. The pedagogical presentation of the basic ideas and tools will be useful for graduate students and researchers intending to work in this rapidly developing field.
Heilbron, Prof John L. (Professor Emeritus of History, Professor Emeritus of History, University of California, Berkeley) & Baggott, Dr Jim (Freelance science writer)
Langley, Chris (Professor of Pharmacy Law and Practice, Professor of Pharmacy Law and Practice, Aston University) & Perrie, Yvonne (Professor in Drug Delivery, Professor in Drug Delivery, University of Strathclyde)
Reed, Peter (Independent Scholar, Independent Scholar) & Morris, Peter J.T. (Senior Research Associate, Science Museum and Honorary Research Associate, Senior Research Associate, Science Museum and Honorary Research Associate, University College London)