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)

70 
[314 
314. 
ON THE CURVES SITUATE ON A SURFACE OF THE SECOND 
ORDER. 
[From the Philosophical Magazine, vol. xxn. (1861), pp. 35—38.] 
A surface of the second order has on it a double system of generating lines, 
real or imaginary; and any two generating lines of the first kind form with any two 
generating lines of the second kind a skew quadrangle. If the equations of the 
planes containing respectively the first and second, second and third, third and fourth, 
fourth and first sides of the quadrangle are x = 0, y — 0, z = 0, w = 0, and if the 
constant multipliers which are implicitly contained in x, y, z, w respectively are suit 
ably determined, then the equation of the surface of the second order (or say for 
shortness the quadric surface) is xw — yz = 0. 
Assume 
V = P 
x X ’ 
z 
X 
V ,, p v 
-, then -, or 
P x P 
say (X, p, v, p), may be regarded as the co 
ordinates of a point on the quadric surface; we in fact have x : y : z : w = 1 , 
X p Xp 
or what is the same thing, =Xp : /xp : vX : /xv. The four quantities (X, p, v, p) are 
for symmetry of notation used as coordinates; but it is to be throughout borne in 
mind that the absolute magnitudes of X and p, and of v and p are essentially 
indeterminate; it is only the ratios X : p and v : p that we are concerned with. 
An equation of the form 
(*$>> APU. p) q = o, 
that is, an equation homogeneous of the degree p as regards (A, p), and homogeneous 
of the degree q as regards (v, p), represents a curve on the quadric surface; and this 
curve is of the order p + q. In fact, combining with the equation of the curve the 
equation of an arbitrary plane 
Ax + By + Cz + Die = 0,
	        
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.