NOTES AND REFERENCES.
601
true for all values of e, e. Again suppose that G alters neither when x receives such
infinitesimal increment, y and 0 remaining constant, nor when y and z separately
receive corresponding increments z, x and x, y in the respective cases remaining
constant. ...G will remain constant for any concurrent linear transformations of x, y, z
when the modulus is unity. This all-important principle...also instantaneously gives
the necessary and sufficient conditions to which an invariant of any given order of
any homogeneous function whatever is subject, and thereby reduces the problem of
discovering invariants to a definite form.” And in section 6 of the same paper
(Sylvester 11) referring to the Note, he writes “This method may also be extended
to concomitants generally. M. Aronhold as I collect from private information was the
first to think of the application of this method to the subject: but it was Mr Cayley
who communicated to me the equations which define the invariants of functions of
two variables. The method by which I obtain these equations and prove their
sufficiency is my own, but I believe has been adopted by Mr Cayley in a Memoir
about to be published in Grelle’s Journal [? 100]. I have also recently been informed
of a paper about to appear in Liouville’s Journal from the pen of M. Eisenstein, where
it appears that the same idea and mode of treatment have been made use of.
Mr Cayley’s communication to me was made in the early part of December last
[1851] and my method (the result of a remark made long before) of obtaining these
and the more general equations and of demonstrating their sufficiency imparted a few
weeks subsequently—I believe between January and February of the present year
[1852],” and then applying the principle to the binary quadric, he proceeds to consider
d d
26^ + 3c^ + ..., and the other operator with the
coefficients in the reverse order, as applied to an invariant <£ of the quantic. The
theory of these operators was thus familiar to Sylvester in 1852, but it was in
nowise made the foundation of the structure.
I notice as contained in the paper Boole (4), what is probably the first state
ment of the “ provectant ” process of forming an invariant; for example, from the
quartic function (a, b, c, d, e\x, y) 4 he derives
Jg (a, b, c, d, etfdy, — d x y . (a, b, c, d, e$x, y) 4 = ae — 46d + 3c 2 , the quadrinvariant;
and similarly from the Hessian (ac — b 2 , 2 (ad —be), ae + 2bd — Sc 2 ) 2 (be — cd), ce — d^x, y) 4
is derived the cubinvariant ace — ad 2 — b 2 e + 2bed — 3c 2 . Mention is also made of the
function A (/38 - y 2 ) + B (/3y -a 8) + G (ay - /3 2 ), (A, B, G given quadric functions, a, /3, y, 8
given cubic functions of (a, b, c, d, e, /)), which is the octinvariant Q of the binary
quintic.
The papers of Sylvester contain a great number of important results which will
some of them be referred to in connexion with the later Memoirs on Quantics.
Hermite’s discovery of the invariant of the degree 18 of the quintic, and the
demonstration of his law of reciprocity are both given in the Memoir by him which
is above referred to.
d
the theory of the operator a ^ +
a il
76