423
783] on MR Wilkinson’s rectangular transformation.
and, in order to the identity of the two values of 6, we must have
that is,
(abc - b 2 ) (ABC - A 2 ) - (abc - a 2 ) (ABC - B 2 ) = 0,
or, reducing,
(a 2 — b 2 ) ABC — (A 2 — B 2 ) abc + J. 2 b 2 — B-a 2 = 0.
But
a 2 — b 2 = — (a 2 — b 2 ), A 2 — B 2 = — k 2 (a 2 — b 2 ), A 2 b 2 — B 2 a 2 = k' 2 (a 2 — b 2 );
hence the whole equation divides by a 2 — b 2 , and, omitting this factor, it becomes
— ABC + /c 2 abc + k' 2 = 0,
which is a known relation between the elliptic functions of the arguments a 0 , b 0 , c 0
connected by the equation a 0 + b 0 + c 0 = 0. Similarly, for </>, we have
v- = °
_A
AB BC ’
ab be
and, comparing the two values of <£, we have the same identical relation.
It thus appears that the three cones
X!+ c- a F!+ (3^= 0 ’
Z2 + ^b y, + Z8*-°-
(the coefficients whereof depend on the elliptic functions sn, cn, and dn, of the
arguments a 0) b 0 , c 0 connected by the equation a 0 + i 0 + c 0 =0) contain a singly infinite
system of rectangular axes.
Considering an argument /„, and denoting its sn, cn, dn by /, f, F respectively,
we have, for an arbitrary line on the first cone, the values
x, y, z — M^k' 2 Aa, M\f^ 2 JLbc. f, M V— aBC. F.
In fact, substituting in the equation of the cone, we obtain the identity
k' 2 + k 2 i 2 -F 2 = 0;
and if we determine M by the condition that x 2 + y 2 + z 2 shall be = 1, then we have
1 = M 2 {k' 2 Aa, + k 2 Abci 2 - aBCF%
where the coefficient of M 2 is
= k’ 2 Aa, + A^vlbc (1 — f 2 ) — aBC(l — k 2 f 2 ),