Out of a job in Aberdeen
Roger Penrose, 26 September 1991
The Scientific Letters and Papers of James Clerk Maxwell
edited by P.M. Harman.
Cambridge, 748 pp., £125, November 1990,0 521 25625 9 Show More
edited by P.M. Harman.
Cambridge, 748 pp., £125, November 1990,
“... James Clerk Maxwell, a Scotsman who lived from 1831 to 1879, was a scientist of outstanding stature. Bearing his name, apart from the famous ‘demon’, is the set of fundamental equations that he discovered, governing the behaviour of electricity, magnetism and light. He also found, among many other things, the basic equation for the distribution of velocities of the molecules in a gas in equilibrium, and made other profound contributions to the statistical study of the molecules in a gas, relating to the Second Law of thermodynamics – which is what Maxwell’s ‘demon’ was all about ... ”