383]
PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS.
571
the equation of the polar is ^ + - = 0 ; the equation may also be written
{a.h x -\-fih y -\-<y§ z y xyz= 0, and it thus appears that the line just defined as the polar is
in fact the second or line polar of the point in regard to the three lines BG, CA, AB
considered as forming a cubic curve.}
[Vol. II. July to December 1864, pp. 6—9.]
1505. (Proposed by Professor Cayley.)—If P, Q, 1, 2, 3, 4 be points on a conic,
then the four points PI, Q2 ; P2, Ql ; P3, Q4 ; P4, Q3 lie on a conic passing through
the points P and Q.
Solution by the Proposer.
This is an immediate consequence of the theorem of the anharmonic property of
the points of a conic. For if (PI, P2, P3, P4) denote the anharmonic ratio of the
lines PI, P2, P3, P4, and so in other cases; then
(P2, PI, P4, P3) = (PI, P2, P3, P4) = (Q1, Q2, Q3, Q4);
(P2, PI, P4, P3) = (Q1, Q2, QS, Q4),
which proves the theorem.
In particular, if P, Q are the circular points at infinity, then the conic is a circle.
Moreover the points PI, Q2 ; P2, Q1 are the antifocal points of 1, 2; viz., calling these
1', 2', then 12 and 1'2' are lines at right angles to each other, having a common
centre 0, but such that l'2' = i. 12, (i = V—l, as usual); or, what is the same thing,
01 = 02 = i. 01' = i. 02'. And the theorem is as follows: viz., if 1, 2, 3, 4 are points
on a circle, and
V, 2' are the antifocal points of 1, 2,
3' 4' 3 4
» 5> 5, ”, “»
then 1', 2', 3', 4' are points on a circle.
As an a posteriori proof, take the centre of the given circle as origin, so that
( a i, A), ( a 2, AX («3, AX ( a 4, Pi) being the coordinates of 1, 2, 3, 4, and the radius
being taken as unity, we have
ttl 2 + ft 2 = a 2 2 + A 2 = «s 2 + /S 3 2 = «4 2 + A 2 = 1 •
Suppose for a moment that x, y are the coordinates of the antifocal points of 1, 2; we
have
00 - «1 ± i (y - Pi) = 0, X - a 2 + i (y - A) = 0,
that is
x + iy = + ip
x — iy = a 2 — ip 2 ,
72—2