Harvard University Press, 1964. — 635 p.
Percy Williams Bridgman (April 21, 1882 – August 20, 1961) was an American physicist who received the 1946 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on the physics of high pressures. He also wrote extensively on the scientific method and on other aspects of the philosophy of science. The Bridgman effect, the Bridgman–Stockbarger technique, and the high-pressure mineral bridgmanite are named after him.
Various physical properties of rubidium and caesium and the resistance of potassium under pressure
The effect of tension on the transverse and longitudinal resistance of metals
The viscosity of liquids under pressure
Thermal conductivity and thermo-electromotive force of single metal crystals
Linear compressibility of fourteen natural crystals
The five alkali metals under high pressure
The effect of pressure on the viscosity of forty-three pure liquids
Thermal conductivity and thermal E.M.F. of Single crystals of several non-cubic metals
Dimensional analysis again
The breakdown of atoms at high pressures
The transverse thermo-electric effect in metal crystals
Some mechanical properties of matter under high pressure
Electrical properties of single metal crystals
The viscosity of mercury under pressure
The compressibility and pressure coefficient of resiitance of ten elements
The linear compressibility of thirteen natural crystals
The pressure transitions of the rubidium halides
Resistance and thermo-electric phenomena in metal crystals
The compressibility and pressure coefficient of resistance of zirconium and hafnium
The effect of pressure on the resistance of three series of alloys
Thermo-electric phenomena and electrical resistance in single metal crystals
The effect of pressure on the rigidity of steel and several varieties of glass
General survey of the effects of pressure on the properties of matter
Irreversible transformations of organic compounds under high pressures (with J. B. Conant)
Die Eigenschaften von Metallen unter hohen hydrostatischen Drucken
On the nature of the transverse thermo-magnetic effect and the transverse thermo-electric effect in crystals
The elastic moduli of five alkali halides
The effect of pressure on the rigidity of several metals
The compressibility and pressure coefficient of resistance of several elements and single crystals
The minimum of resistance at high pressure
The volume of eighteen Hquids as a function of pressure and temperature
Compressibihty and pressure coefficient of resistance, including single crystal magnesium
The P-V-T relations of NH4CI and NHiBr, and in particular the effect of pressure on the volume anomalies
Recently discovered complexities in the properties of simple substances
Volume-temperature-pressure relations for several non-volatile liquids