787]
FUNCTION.
531
m and n having any positive or negative integer values whatever, including zero, except
that m, n must not be simultaneously = 0, these values being taken account of in the
factor u outside the product. But until further defined, such a product has no definite
value, and consequently no meaning whatever. Imagine m, n to be coordinates, and
suppose that we have, surrounding the origin, a closed curve having the origin for its
centre, i.e. the curve is such that, if a, ¡3 be the coordinates of a point thereof, then
— a, — /3 are also the coordinates of a point thereof; suppose further that the form
of the curve is given, but that its magnitude depends upon a parameter h, and that
the curve is such that, when h is indefinitely large, each point of the curve is at an
indefinitely large distance from the origin; for instance, the curve might be a circle
or ellipse, or a parallelogram, the origin being in each case the centre. Then if in
the double product, taking the value of h as given, we first give to m, n all the
positive or negative integer values (the simultaneous values 0, 0 excluded) which corre
spond to points within the curve, and then make h indefinitely large, the product will
thus have a definite value; but this value will still be dependent on the form of the curve.
Moreover, varying in any manner the form of the curve, the ratio of the two values
of the double product will be = exp /3u 2 , where /3 is a determinate value depending only
on the forms of the two curves; or, what is the same thing, if we first give to the
curve a certain form, say we take it to be a circle, and then give it any other form,
the product in the latter case is equal to its former value multiplied by exp ¡3u 2 ,
where /3 depends only upon the form of the curve in the latter case.
Considering the form of the bounding curve as given, and writing the double
product in the form
u + meo + nv
the simultaneous values m = 0, n = 0 being now admitted in the numerator, although
still excluded from the denominator, then if we write for instance u-f 2o> instead of u,
each factor in the numerator is changed into a contiguous factor, and the numerator
remains unaltered, except that we introduce certain factors which lie outside the
bounding curve, and omit certain factors which lie inside the bounding curve; we, in
fact, affect the result by a singly infinite series of factors belonging to points adjacent
to the bounding curve ; and it appears on investigation that we thus introduce a con
stant factor exp 7 (m + «). The final result thus is that the product
does not remain unaltered when u is changed into u + 2&>, but that it becomes there
fore affected with a constant factor, exp y (w + eo). And similarly the function does not
remain unaltered when u is changed into u + 2v, but it becomes affected with a factor,
exp 8 (u + v). The bounding curve may however be taken such that the function is
unaltered when u is changed into u + 2a> : this will be the case if the curve is a
rectangle such that the length in the direction of the axis of m is infinitely great in
comparison of that in the direction of the axis of n ; or it may be taken such that
the function is unaltered when u is changed into u + 2v: this will be so if the curve
67—2