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,