Conformal Mapping
A conformal map is a holomorphic transformation that preserves angles; such maps reshape regions of the plane while keeping local geometry intact, and the Riemann mapping theorem shows how flexible they are.
Definition
A conformal mapping is a bijective holomorphic function between plane regions whose derivative never vanishes, so that it preserves angles and orientation at every point while distorting global shape.
Scope
This topic covers the angle-preserving property of holomorphic maps with non-vanishing derivative, Mobius (fractional linear) transformations and their action on the Riemann sphere, automorphisms of the disk and half-plane, the Schwarz lemma, the Riemann mapping theorem, and boundary correspondence with the Schwarz-Christoffel formula.
Core questions
- Why do holomorphic maps with non-zero derivative preserve angles?
- Which transformations are the conformal automorphisms of the disk and the sphere?
- Which plane regions can be conformally mapped onto one another?
- How do conformal maps transfer solutions of boundary-value problems between regions?
Key theories
- Riemann mapping theorem
- Every simply connected proper open subset of the plane is conformally equivalent to the unit disk, reducing the conformal classification of such regions to a single model and organizing geometric function theory.
- Schwarz lemma
- A holomorphic self-map of the disk fixing the origin cannot expand and is a rotation if it preserves any interior distance, the basic rigidity result classifying the automorphisms of the disk.
Clinical relevance
Because conformal maps preserve harmonic functions, they transform potential, electrostatic, heat-conduction, and ideal-fluid-flow problems from complicated geometries onto simple ones where solutions are known, making them a classical tool in physics and engineering, including aerodynamics and electrical field computation.
History
Riemann stated the mapping theorem in his 1851 dissertation, though a rigorous proof required later work by Schwarz, Koebe, and others. Mobius transformations and the Schwarz lemma developed alongside as the explicit tools of the geometric theory.
Key figures
- Bernhard Riemann
- Hermann Amandus Schwarz
- August Ferdinand Mobius
Related topics
Seminal works
- ahlfors1979
- conway1978
Frequently asked questions
- What does it mean for a map to be conformal?
- It preserves the angle and orientation between any two curves passing through a point; holomorphic functions with non-vanishing derivative are exactly the orientation-preserving conformal maps of the plane.
- Does the Riemann mapping theorem apply to every region?
- It applies to simply connected proper open subsets of the plane; the whole plane itself is excluded, and multiply connected regions require additional invariants beyond a single conformal model.