Full text: The collected mathematical papers of Arthur Cayley, Sc.D., F.R.S., sadlerian professor of pure mathematics in the University of Cambridge (Vol. 5)

456 
A SUPPLEMENTARY MEMOIR ON CAUSTICS. 
[359 
then after some simple reductions, we find 
>3 = 16 {(a? 2 + y 2 — to 2 — l) 2 + 6m (x — m)}, 
T— 32 (2 (a? 2 + y 2 — m 2 — l) 3 + 18?» (a? — m) (a? 2 + y 2 — ??? 2 — 1) — 27 (x — m) 2 }, 
and thence 
S 3 — T 2 = 1024 (x-myU, 
where 
17= 4 (¿e 2 +y 2 — m 2 —l) 3 
+ 4m 2 (a? 2 + y 2 — on 2 — 1 ) 2 
+ 36m (a? 2 + y 2 — m 2 — 1) (x — on) 
— 27 (x — m) 2 
+ 32 m 3 (a? — m), 
or, what is the same thing, 
U = 
4 (a? 2 + y-J 
— (8m 2 + 12) (x 2 + y 2 ) 2 
+ (3 Qmx + 4m 4 — 20m 2 + 12) (x 2 + y 2 ) 
— 27a? 2 + (— 4m 2 + 18) mx + m 2 — 4 ; 
so that the equation of the secondary caustic is U = 0, or the secondary caustic is, 
as stated above, a sextic curve. 
5. It is easy to see that the foregoing envelope may be geometrically constructed 
as follows: viz. if from the point Q (coordinates cos 6, sin 6) on the reflecting circle 
we draw QM perpendicular to the line x — m = 0, and then from the point M draw 
MN perpendicular to QT, the tangent at T, and produce MN to a point P such that 
PN = NM, then P is a point of the envelope; and we thence obtain for the 
coordinates {x, y) of a point P of the envelope the values 
x = m — 2 (m — cos 6) cos 2 6, 
y = sin 6 — 2 (m — cos 6) cos 6 sin 6,
	        
Waiting...

Note to user

Dear user,

In response to current developments in the web technology used by the Goobi viewer, the software no longer supports your browser.

Please use one of the following browsers to display this page correctly.

Thank you.