[43
27 G
43.
ON THE DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS WHICH OCCUR IN
DYNAMICAL PROBLEMS.
[From the Cambridge and Dublin Mathematical Journal, vol. n. (1847), pp. 210—219.]
•Jacobi, in a very elaborate memoir, “ Theoria novi multiplicatoris systemati aequa
tionum differentialium vulgarium applicandi ” ( J ), has demonstrated a remarkable property
of an extensive class of differential equations, namely, that when all the integrals of
the system except a single one are known, the remaining integral can always be deter
mined by a quadrature. Included in the class in question are, as Jacobi proceeds to
show, the differential equations corresponding to any dynamical problem in which
neither the forces nor the equations of condition involve the velocities; i. e. in all
ordinary dynamical problems, when all the integrals but one are known, the remaining
integral can be determined by quadratures. In the case where the forces and equations
of condition are likewise independent of the time, it is immediately seen that the
system may be transformed into a system in which the number of equations is less
by unity than in the original one, and which does not involve the time, which may
afterwards be determined by a quadrature 1 2 ; and, Jacobi’s theorem applying to this new
system, he arrives at the proposition “ In any dynamical problem where the forces
and equations of condition contain only the coordinates of the different points of the
system, when all the integrals but two are determined, the remaining integrals may
be found by quadratures only.” In the following paper, which contains the demonstra
tions of these propositions, the analysis employed by Jacobi has been considerably
varied in the details, but the leading features of it are preserved.
1 Crelle, t. xxvn. [1844], pp. 199—268 and t. xxix. [1845], pp. 213—279 and 333—376. Compare also the
memoir in Liouville, t. x. [1845], pp. 337—346.
- For, representing the velocities by x\ y' ... the dynamical system takes the form
dt : dx : dy ... : dx' : dy' ... = 1 : x' : y' ... : X : Y ... ,
and the system in question is simply dx : dy ... : dx' : dy' ... = x' : y' ... : X : Y ... .