212]
A MEMOIR ON THE PROBLEM OF DISTURBED ELLIPTIC MOTION.
275
The disturbed equations may be dealt with in the usual manner by the method
of the variation of the elements, and attending only to the variations of the elements
we have
dr
= 0,
dv
= 0,
dy
= 0,
y dr
_ dü,
d dt
dr
dv\
_ dn
y dt)
dv
_dCl
dt)
~ dy
dt,
or, what is the same thing,
dr = 0,
dv = 0,
dy = 0,
j nae sin f _ dVL ^
Vl - e 2 ~ dr
d na 2 V1 — e 2 cos d> = ^ dt,
dv
_ dci
dnos'd 1 — e 2 sin d> cos x — - T -dt,
dy
where as before 12 = Q (r, v, y).
In virtue of the relations dv =0, dy= 0, we have the above-mentioned equations,
dx = — tan 2 cosec cf) dcf>,
dz = — tan 2 cot (f) dcf),
dz = cos (p dx,
dx = — d6,
dr + cos (f>d0 = 0,
d sin <f> cos x = — sin cf> sin x dx + cos x cos <£ dcf),
= cos x cos cf) sec 2 z d<p,
= sec x cos </> sec 2 y dcf>;
we have
and the last two equations for the variations become
d na 2 Vl — e" cos cf) — na 2 VI — e 2 sin cf> dcf)
(№
dv
dD,
dt,
d na 2 Vl — e- sin cf) cos x -f na 2 Vl — e 2 sec x cos cf) sec 2 y dcf> — dt,
35—2