Full text: The collected mathematical papers of Arthur Cayley, Sc.D., F.R.S., late sadlerian professor of pure mathematics in the University of Cambridge (Vol. 12)

318 
[841 
841. 
ON A DIFFERENTIAL OPERATOR. 
[From the Messenger of Mathematics, vol. xiv. (1885), pp. 190, 191.] 
Write X = 1 + bx + cx 2 + ..., = (1 - cue) (1 - /3x) (1 - yx)...; then by Capt. MacMahon’s 
theorem, any non-unitary function of the roots a, ¡3, 7, ... is reduced to zero by the 
operation 
A, = di + bd c + eda + ...; 
for instance, if 
(2), = Sa 2 = b 2 — 2c, 
we have 
A (b 2 -2c) = 2b + b (- 2), = 0. 
We have 
AX = x + bx 2 + cm? 4- ... = xX; 
and writing, moreover, X', = b + 2cx + Mx 2 + &c., for the derived function of X, then 
AX' = 1 + 2 bx + Scx 2 + ...= (xX)'. 
fX' \ 
We can hence shew that A — b) =0; the value is, in fact, 
AX' X'AX A7 + . (xX)' X'xX n 
y X. 2 > that is, 1> 
which is 
X 2 X 
X + xX' xX' 
X 
X 
-1, = 0. 
X' . 
This is right, for Jr is a sum of non-unitary symmetric functions of the roots; in 
fact, 
Z =2^—- = -(l)-(2)x-(3)x 2 -&c., 
X 
or since b = — (1), this is 
1 — ax 
X' 
— — 6 = — (2) x — (3) x 2 — &c., 
a sum of non-unitary functions of the roots.
	        
Waiting...

Note to user

Dear user,

In response to current developments in the web technology used by the Goobi viewer, the software no longer supports your browser.

Please use one of the following browsers to display this page correctly.

Thank you.