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example of conformal mapping
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(Example)
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Consider the four curves $A=\{t\}$ $B=\{t+it\}$ $C=\{it\}$ and $D=\{-t+it\}$ $t\in[-10,10]$ Suppose there is a mapping $f:\mathbb{C}\mapsto\mathbb{C}$ which maps $A$ to $D$ and $B$ to $C$ Is $f$ conformal at $z_0=0$ The size of the angles between $A$ and $B$ at the point of intersection $z_0=0$ is preserved, however the orientation is not. Therefore $f$ is not conformal at $z_0=0$ Now suppose there is a function $g:\mathbb{C}\mapsto\mathbb{C}$ which maps $A$ to $C$ and $B$ to $D$ In this case we see
not only that the size of the angles is preserved, but also the orientation. Therefore $g$ is conformal at $z_0=0$
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"example of conformal mapping" is owned by Johan.
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Cross-references: function, orientation, intersection, point, angles, size, conformal, mapping, curves
There is 1 reference to this entry.
This is version 3 of example of conformal mapping, born on 2003-05-04, modified 2003-05-04.
Object id is 4241, canonical name is ExampleOfConformalMapping.
Accessed 4478 times total.
Classification:
| AMS MSC: | 30E20 (Functions of a complex variable :: Miscellaneous topics of analysis in the complex domain :: Integration, integrals of Cauchy type, integral representations of analytic functions) |
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Pending Errata and Addenda
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