341]
ON THE SEXTACTIC POINTS OF A PLANE CURVE.
247
53. By forming in a similar manner the coefficients of the other terms, it
appears that
Jac. (U, H, V)H-(dîl, B', GJ
\ , fl , v
d x H, d y H, djl
or since the determinant is
we have the required equation,
Jac. (U, H, V)H = (32l, ...$A', B’, CJ.
This completes the series of formulae used in the transformations of the condition
for the sextactic point.
Appendix, Nos. 54 to 74.
For the sake of exhibiting in their proper connexion some of the formulae
employed in the foregoing first transformation of the condition for a sextactic point,
I have investigated them in the present Appendix, which however is numbered
continuously with the memoir.
54. The investigations of my former memoir and the present memoir have
reference to the operations
d 1 = dxd x + dy 3 y + dzd Z)
do = d?xd x + dr yd y + d?zd z ,
d 3 = d 3 xd x + dhydy + d 3 zd z ,
&c.,
where if (A, B, G) are the first differential coefficients of a function U = (*][&, y, z) m ,
and A, y, v are arbitrary constants, then we have
dx = Bv — Cy, dy=GX — Av, dz — Ay — BX ;
3 = {Bv — Gy) d x + (GX — Av) d y + (Ay — BX) d z
so that putting
we have 3i = 3. The foregoing expressions of (dx, dy, dz) determine of course the
values of (d 2 x, d-y, d 2 z), (d 3 x, d 3 y, d 3 z), &c., and it is throughout assumed that these
values are substituted in the symbols 3 2 , 3 3 , &c., so that di, =3, and 3 2 , 3 3 , &c. denote
each of them an operator such as Xd x +Yd y Zd z , where (X, F, Z) are functions of
the coordinates; such operator, in so far as it is a function of the coordinates, may
therefore be made an operand, and be operated upon by itself or any other like
operator.