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A SUPPLEMENTARY MEMOIR ON CAUSTICS.
[359
In all the above forms the double tangent x — m touches the curve at the points
y = ± 1, but the other two intersections of the double tangent with the curve are
imaginary.
For m = 1, the double tangent has the two coincident real intersections y = 0, or
it is in fact a triple tangent.
For m<l>0, the double tangent has with the curve two real intersections, viz.
they are the points where the double tangent meets the circle x 2 + y 2 = l.
And finally, for m = 0, the points in question unite themselves with the points of
contact, the double tangent x = 0 being in this case the common tangent at the two
cusps x = 0, y=± 1.
Added May 13, 1867.
20. As remarked in the original memoir, p. 312, the secondary caustic, in the
last-mentioned case m =0, is a curve similar to and double the magnitude of the
caustic itself (viz. the caustic for parallel rays reflected at a circle), the position of
the two curves differing by a right angle.
The secondary caustics corresponding to the different values of m form, it is clear,
a system of parallel curves; and, by the remark just referred to, it appears that this
system is similar to the system of curves parallel to the caustic for parallel rays
reflected at a circle.