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ON THE ATTRACTION OF AN ELLIPSOID.
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For 03 = 0, the cone coincides with the circumscribed cone; as to increases, the
aperture of the cone gradually diminishes, until for a certain value, co = il, the cone
reduces itself to a straight line (the normal of the confocal ellipsoid through the
attracted point). It is easily seen that il 2 is the positive root of the equation
Pa? T)?lr v?c 2
W+ m + D? + m8 + DJ-\- n8 = ’
. . JcS
a different form of which may be obtained by writing fl 2 = ^, f: being then determined
by means of the equation
la 2 mb 2 nc 2
k + U; k + + k+ n% ’
that is,
k
m
+ 1 •
are the semiaxes of the confocal ellipsoid through the attracted point.
In the case where co remains indeterminate, it is obvious that the cone intersects
the ellipsoid in the curve in which the ellipsoid is intersected by a certain hyperboloid
of revolution of two sheets, having the attracted point for a focus, and the plane of
contact of the ellipsoid with the circumscribed cone (that is the polar plane of the
attracted point) for the corresponding directrix plane: also the excentricity of the hyperboloid
is — \J(J?a* + w?b 2 + n 2 c 2 ), which suffices for its complete determination. For = 0, the
hyperboloid reduces itself to the plane of contact of the ellipsoid with the circum
scribed cone, and for co = il, the hyperboloid and the ellipsoid have a double contact,
viz. at the points where the ellipsoid is intersected by the normal to the confocal
ellipsoid through the attracted point.
If oo remains constant while k is supposed to vary, that is, if the ellipsoid vary in
magnitude (the position and proportion of its axes remaining unaltered), the locus of
the intersection of the cone and the ellipsoid is a surface of the fourth order defined
by the equation
('!x 2 + my 2 + nz~ — lax — mby — ncz'f = t» 2 (¿tr + y 2 + z 2 ),
and consisting of an exterior and an interior sheet meeting at the attracted point,
which is a conical point on the surface, viz. a point where the tangent plane is
replaced by a tangent cone. The general form of this surface is easily seen from the
figure, in which the ellipsoid has been replaced by a sphere, and the surface in question
c.
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