Abstract

FOLLOWING in the footsteps of Hamilton in his Report to the British Association, contained in the Proceedings for the year 1836, we may arrive at a solution, in a certain sense the simplest, of a problem in algebra the origin of which reaches back to Tschirn-hausen, born 1651, deceased 1708. Every tyro knows how a quadratic equation, and all equations of a superior degree thereto, may be transformed into another in which the second term is wanting. Tschirnhausen showed that a cubic equation, and all equations superior in degree to the cubic, might be deprived of their second and third terms by solving linear and quadratic equations. Then over a century later Bring, of the University of Lund, in 1786 showed that every equation of the 5th, or any higher degree, might be deprived of its first three terms by means of solving certain cubic, quadratic, and linear equations.1 What, then, it may be asked, is the law of the progression of which the three first terms are 2, 3, 5? What is the lowest degree an equation can have in order that it may admit of being deprived of four consecutive terms by aid of equations of the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th degrees, or more generally of i consecutive terms by aid of equations of the 1st, 2nd, 3rd,... and ith degrees, i.e. by equations none of a higher degree than the ith?2

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