514
SOLUTIONS OF A SMITH’S PRIZE PAPER FOR 1871.
[587
But we have
2 _ /docV ( c tyX 2 (dzX 2
\dt) \c?£/ "\c££/ ’
dhi drx d 0 dd _ dA
X Tt~ V №~Jt r dt~ 2 dt’
the foregoing equation may be written
i. v 2 . ,d 2 .
nr- in TLr
if — ■in' r X = C — 2 Itfrrdr — 2 I typdp,
d.v 2 . , d 2 A _ , dr _ , dp
- 4>n -^rrz = — 2(f>r ^ - 2\Jrp r
dt’
whence
the required result.
12. If x, y are the coordinates of a particle moving in piano under the action of
a central force varying as (distance)~ 2 : write down the expressions of the coordinates
x, y in terms of the time t and of four arbitrary constants: and (in case of disturbed
motion) starting from the equations
Bx = 0, By = 0, Bx' = dt, By' = ^ dt,
{the notation to be explained), indicate the process of finding the variations of the
constants in terms of (1) ^, (2) the derived functions of il in regard to the
constants.
We have
f cosu — e \/(l—e 2 )sinu .
x = a •{- cos m + —, — sin m
11 — e cos u 1 — e cos u
where
l\/(l — e 2 ) sm u cos u — e
y = a \ —- cos m — s sm m
° 1 — e cos u
n — e sin u = t
an equation serving to express u in terms of t and the constants a, e, c; the fore
going equations, therefore, in effect give x, y in terms of t and the four constants
a, e, c, m.
In the second part of the question, O is a given function of x, y, t, the differential
coefficients ^ being the partial ones in regard to x, y respectively. The equation
Bx = 0 signifies that the variation of x, in so far as it arises from the variation of
the constants, is = 0; it in fact means
dx da + dx de ^ dx dc + dx dm _ ^
da dt de dt dc dt dm dt