Full text: The collected mathematical papers of Arthur Cayley, Sc.D., F.R.S., late sadlerian professor of pure mathematics in the University of Cambridge (Vol. 8)

ON THE THEORY OF THE SINGULAR SOLUTIONS OF DIFFER 
ENTIAL EQUATIONS OF THE FIRST ORDER. 
[From the Messenger of Mathematics, vol. n. (1873), pp. 6—12.] 
I CONSIDER a differential equation under the form 
0> y> p) = 0, 
where 
1°. <f) is as to p, rational and integral of the degree n; 
2°. it is, or is taken to be, one-valued in regard to (x, y); 
3°. it has no mere (x, y) factor; 
4°. it is indecomposable as regards p. 
Considering (x, y) as the coordinates of a point in piano, the differential equation 
determines a system of curves, in general indecomposable, the system depending on 
a single variable parameter, and such that through each point of the plane there pass 
n curves. 
Such a system is represented by an integral equation 
f(x, y, c 1} c a ...c m ) = 0, 
where 
5°. / is rational and integral in regard to the m constants, which constants are 
connected by an algebraic (m — 1) fold relation; 
6°. it is, or is taken to be, one-valued in regard to (x, y); 
7°. it has no mere (x, y) factor; 
8°. it is indecomposable as regards (x, y); 
C. VIII. 
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