351]
401
351.
ON CUBIC CONES AND CURVES.
[From the Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, vol. XL Part i. (1866),
pp. 129—144. Read April 18, 1864.]
There is contained in Sir Isaac’s Newton’s Enumeratio Lineament tertii Ordinis
(1706), under the heading Genesis Curvarum per Umbras, the remarkable theorem that,
in the same way as the several curves of the second order may be considered as the
shadows of a circle, that is, the sections of a cone having a circular base, so the
several curves of the third order, or cubic curves, may be considered as the shadows
of the five Divergent Parabolas. It was remarked by Chasles, Note xx. to the Aperçu
Historique (1837), that they may also be considered as the shadows of the five curves
having a centre (the Newtonian Species 27, 38, 59, 62, 72), and that the theorem may
be stated as follows, viz. (in the same way that all the curves of the second order
are the sections of a single kind of cone of the second order, so) all the curves of
the third order may be considered as the sections of five kinds of cones of the third
order—and that cutting these in one way we have the five Divergent Parabolas, cutting
them in another way the five curves with a centre. The nature of these five kinds
of cones, or, what is the same thing, that of the spherical curves in which they are
intersected by a concentric sphere, was first pointed out by Mobius in his most
interesting Memoir, “ Grundformen der Linien dritter Ordnung,” Abh. der K. Sachs. Ges.
zu Leipzig, 1853. I reproduce in the present memoir the characterisation of these five
kinds of cones—which I call the simplex, the complex, the acnodal, the crunodal, and
the cuspidal—and I further develope the geometrical and analytical theory ; in particular
I arrive at a division of the simplex cones into three subkinds, the simplex trilateral,
neutral, and quadrilateral. I have throughout spoken of cones rather than of plane
curves, using however, as far as may be, language which is also applicable to a plane
curve, thus, instead of lines of inflexion, tangent planes, of a cone, I say inflexions,
tangents, «See. But the theory of the cone is of course that of the projective j3roperties
C. V. 51