A MEMOIR UPON CAUSTICS.
365
[145
Take
coordi-
y the
writing
145]
in which z may be considered as the variable parameter; hence the equation of the
caustic may be obtained by equating to zero the discriminant of the above function
of z\ but the discriminant of a sextic function has not yet been calculated. The
equation would be of the order 20, and it appears from the result previously obtained
for parallel rays, that the equation must be of the order 12 at the least; it is, I think,
probable that there is not any reduction of order in the general case. It is however
practicable, as will presently be seen, to obtain the tangential equation of the caustic
by refraction, and the curve is thus shown to be only of the class 6.
XXVII.
Suppose that rays proceeding from a point are refracted at a circle, and let it be
required to find the equation of the secondary caustic: take the centre of the circle as
origin, let c be the radius, £, y the coordinates of the radiant point, a, /3 the coordinates
of a point upon the circle, yu the index of refraction; the secondary caustic will be
the envelope of the circle,
y 2 {(x - a) 2 + (y - /3) 2 } - {(I - a) 2 + (y- /3) 2 } = 0,
where a, /3 are variable parameters connected by the equation a? + ¡3 2 — c 2 = 0 ; the
equation of the circle may be written in the form
y 2 (x 2 + y 2 + c 2 ) - d 2 + y 2 + c 2 ) - 2 (y?x - f) ct - 2 (y 2 y - v ) ¡3 = 0.
But in general the envelope of Aa + B/3 + C =0, where a, ¡3 are connected by the
equation a 2 +/3 2 — c 2 = 0, is c 2 (A 2 + B 2 ) — G 2 = 0, and hence in the present case the equation
of the envelope is
[y 2 (x 2 + y 2 + c 2 ) — d 2 + y 2 + c 2 )} 2 = 4c 2 {(y 2 x — |) 2 + (y?y — ??) 2 },
which may also be written
[y? (x 2 + y 2 — C 2 ) — d 2 + y 2 — G 2 )) 2 = 4c 2 y? {(x — f) 2 + (y — y) 2 }.
If the axis of x be taken through the radiant point, then y =0, and writing also
% = a, the equation becomes
{,y 2 (x 2 + y 2 — c 2 ) — a 2 + c 2 } 2 = 4c 2 //. 2 {{x — a) 2 + y 2 \;
or taking the square root of each side,
{y, 2 (cc 2 + y 2 — c 2 ) — a 2 + c 2 } = 2c/x V(x — a) 2 + y 2 ;
whence multiplying by 1 - and adding on each side c 2 (y — -') +(x — ci) 2 + y 2 , we have
y 2 j(^ - + 2/j = 0* -a) 2 + y 2 + c(y- -^) j ,
or
y\J [x - ^ + y 2 = \/(x - a) 2 + y 2 + c ,
which shows that the secondary caustic is the Oval of Descartes, or as it will be con
venient to call it, the Cartesian.