Finding a conformal map from the intersection of two disks to the unit disk.












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I'm trying to solve a problem which asks me to find a conformal mapping from ${zin mathbb{C}: |z-i|< sqrt2$ and $|z+i|<sqrt2}$ onto the open unit disk.



I'm really new to these and I'm a bit lost because this doesn't resemble the examples I've seen so far.



Obviously the two disks intersect at $±1$, but I don't know where I should be looking to map them to, and while I know usually you'd try to map the region to something familiar and then compose this with another map to the unit disk from there, but I can't see how to map this to something simpler.



As I said, I haven't really done many examples of conformal maps so I'd really appreciate if you could help walk me through this example.



Thanks in advance!










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    0












    $begingroup$


    I'm trying to solve a problem which asks me to find a conformal mapping from ${zin mathbb{C}: |z-i|< sqrt2$ and $|z+i|<sqrt2}$ onto the open unit disk.



    I'm really new to these and I'm a bit lost because this doesn't resemble the examples I've seen so far.



    Obviously the two disks intersect at $±1$, but I don't know where I should be looking to map them to, and while I know usually you'd try to map the region to something familiar and then compose this with another map to the unit disk from there, but I can't see how to map this to something simpler.



    As I said, I haven't really done many examples of conformal maps so I'd really appreciate if you could help walk me through this example.



    Thanks in advance!










    share|cite|improve this question









    $endgroup$















      0












      0








      0





      $begingroup$


      I'm trying to solve a problem which asks me to find a conformal mapping from ${zin mathbb{C}: |z-i|< sqrt2$ and $|z+i|<sqrt2}$ onto the open unit disk.



      I'm really new to these and I'm a bit lost because this doesn't resemble the examples I've seen so far.



      Obviously the two disks intersect at $±1$, but I don't know where I should be looking to map them to, and while I know usually you'd try to map the region to something familiar and then compose this with another map to the unit disk from there, but I can't see how to map this to something simpler.



      As I said, I haven't really done many examples of conformal maps so I'd really appreciate if you could help walk me through this example.



      Thanks in advance!










      share|cite|improve this question









      $endgroup$




      I'm trying to solve a problem which asks me to find a conformal mapping from ${zin mathbb{C}: |z-i|< sqrt2$ and $|z+i|<sqrt2}$ onto the open unit disk.



      I'm really new to these and I'm a bit lost because this doesn't resemble the examples I've seen so far.



      Obviously the two disks intersect at $±1$, but I don't know where I should be looking to map them to, and while I know usually you'd try to map the region to something familiar and then compose this with another map to the unit disk from there, but I can't see how to map this to something simpler.



      As I said, I haven't really done many examples of conformal maps so I'd really appreciate if you could help walk me through this example.



      Thanks in advance!







      complex-analysis complex-numbers conformal-geometry mobius-transformation






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      asked Jan 2 at 20:10









      oxsamoxsam

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          Start with the Möbius transformation $T(z) = frac{z-1}{z+1}$. $T(1) = 0$ and $T(-1) = infty$, therefore the two circles $|z pm i| = sqrt 2$ are mapped to lines through the origin. Use the preservation of angles to compute the directions of those lines. Conclude that $T$ maps the intersection of the two disks to a certain sector with opening angle $frac pi 2$. Then map this sector to a half-plane, and finally to the unit disk.






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            $begingroup$

            Start with the Möbius transformation $T(z) = frac{z-1}{z+1}$. $T(1) = 0$ and $T(-1) = infty$, therefore the two circles $|z pm i| = sqrt 2$ are mapped to lines through the origin. Use the preservation of angles to compute the directions of those lines. Conclude that $T$ maps the intersection of the two disks to a certain sector with opening angle $frac pi 2$. Then map this sector to a half-plane, and finally to the unit disk.






            share|cite|improve this answer











            $endgroup$


















              1












              $begingroup$

              Start with the Möbius transformation $T(z) = frac{z-1}{z+1}$. $T(1) = 0$ and $T(-1) = infty$, therefore the two circles $|z pm i| = sqrt 2$ are mapped to lines through the origin. Use the preservation of angles to compute the directions of those lines. Conclude that $T$ maps the intersection of the two disks to a certain sector with opening angle $frac pi 2$. Then map this sector to a half-plane, and finally to the unit disk.






              share|cite|improve this answer











              $endgroup$
















                1












                1








                1





                $begingroup$

                Start with the Möbius transformation $T(z) = frac{z-1}{z+1}$. $T(1) = 0$ and $T(-1) = infty$, therefore the two circles $|z pm i| = sqrt 2$ are mapped to lines through the origin. Use the preservation of angles to compute the directions of those lines. Conclude that $T$ maps the intersection of the two disks to a certain sector with opening angle $frac pi 2$. Then map this sector to a half-plane, and finally to the unit disk.






                share|cite|improve this answer











                $endgroup$



                Start with the Möbius transformation $T(z) = frac{z-1}{z+1}$. $T(1) = 0$ and $T(-1) = infty$, therefore the two circles $|z pm i| = sqrt 2$ are mapped to lines through the origin. Use the preservation of angles to compute the directions of those lines. Conclude that $T$ maps the intersection of the two disks to a certain sector with opening angle $frac pi 2$. Then map this sector to a half-plane, and finally to the unit disk.







                share|cite|improve this answer














                share|cite|improve this answer



                share|cite|improve this answer








                edited Jan 3 at 2:50









                Xander Henderson

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                14.9k103555










                answered Jan 2 at 20:38









                Martin RMartin R

                30.5k33558




                30.5k33558






























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