Not really. There was no notable person with that name although it is possible that there are (were) people with that name. The Cayley–Hamilton theorem is named, not after a person called Cayley Hamilton, but after TWO mathematicians: Arthur Cayley and William Rowan Hamilton.
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Ronald C. D. Jasper has written:
'Arthur Cayley Headlam'
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Sir G. Cayley has written:
'Aeronautical and miscellaneous note-book (ca. 1799-1826) of Sir George Cayley, with...a list of the Cayley papers'
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Sir George Cayley was born in Scarborough, Yorkshire, England.
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George Cayley was part of the prominent Cayley family in England. He had a wife named Sarah and eight children. His family was known for their contributions to aeronautics and engineering.
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Cayley's Theorem states that every group G is isomorphic to a subgroup of the symmetric group on G.
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J. P. Ward has written:
'Quaternions and Cayley numbers' -- subject(s): Quaternions, Cayley numbers
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Herbert Cayley- Webster has written:
'Through New Guinea and the cannibal countries' -- subject(s): Description and travel
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Charles Everett Cayley has written:
'The North Atlantic fisheries in United States-Canadian relations' -- subject(s): Fisheries, Foreign relations
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