RefNo | MS/603/7/118 |
Previous numbers | 1148 |
Level | Item |
Title | Letter from Horace Lamb, 6 Wilbraham Road, Fellowfield, Manchester, to [Joseph] Larmor |
Creator | Lamb; Sir Horace (1849-1934); British mathematician |
Recipient | Larmor; Sir Joseph (1857-1942); Irish theoretical physicist |
Date | 22 December 1918 |
Description | He knows that Larmor is not keen on the election, but congratulates him on the result. He has Larmor's paper, sent long ago. His own paper has nothing to do with binocular vision, only with the rotations of the eye. The Manchester Society was hard up for a paper and so he filled a meeting with a talk. He has nothing to print at present, but hopes to produce something. He thinks it elementary, but physiologists have been intimidated by Helmholtz's analysis, and mathematicians have passed on. Elements of interest to both have been ignored. |
Extent | 2p. |
Format | Manuscript |
PhysicalDescription | Ink on paper |
AccessStatus | Open |
Fellows associated with this archive
Code | PersonName | Dates |
NA8246 | Lamb; Sir; Horace (1849 - 1934) | 1849 - 1934 |