[104
t
i-permutable column 0
1
UUUU, &c.
transformations, just as
fi 2 > %iVi> Vi for
& 2 , ^2, i?2 2
£ 3 2 , ZsVs, Vz
23 U'°U' l U' 2 \ and this
the theory, but would
inants. The preceding
:onsidered as belonging
V. 23) UUUU.
d second blanks of a column.
the symbol would have been
.’perdeterminant notation are
after certain differentiations
104] ON THE THEORY OF PERMUTANTS. 23
It will, I think, illustrate the general theory to perform the development of the
last-mentioned intermutant. We have
'0
0
(T
=
'0
0
0'
-
'0
0
0'
-
'0
0
11
+
r°
0
1 j
1
1
1
1
i
i
1
i
0
1
1
1
1
i
0
0
0
0
0
0
0~
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
,1
1
T
a
i
i,
a
1
1,
A
1
0,
a
1
oj
t
t
t
t
2!
0 0 0
0
0
0
-
0
0
0
"0 0 r
t
_1 1 1_
-1 1 1.
-1 1 o_
_1 1 1_
= 2 {{ad — be) 2 — 4 (ac — b a ) (bd — c 2 )},
= 2 (a 2 d 2 4- 4ac 3 + 4<b 3 d - 3b 2 c 2 — Gabcd),
the different steps of which may be easily verified.
The following important theorem (which is, I believe, the same as a theorem of
Mr Sylvester’s, published in the Philosophical Magazine) is perhaps best exhibited by
means of a simple example. Consider the intermutant
( x 1 >
V_ 4
x 3
M 2,
where in the first column the sets are distinguished as before by the horizontal bar,
but in the second column the 1, 2 are to be considered as forming a set, and the
3, 4 as forming a second set. Then, partially expanding, the intermutant is
' X
V
-
f y
V
-
' X
r
+
f y
1 '
y
4
X
4
y
4
X
4
X
3
X
3
y
3
y
3
y
2,
Ly
2,
1#
2,
K.X
2 j
or, since entire horizontal lines may obviously be permuted,
+ + + +
^ il-/«, n _ ^
' X
r
-
'y
r
-
' X
r
+
f y
r
y
2
y
2
X
2
X
2
X
3
X
3
y
3
y
3
,y
4,
4,
,y
4,
A
4 )