COMPLEX VARIABLES
y
θ 2 θ 1
C 1
C 2
z 1
z 2
z 0
w=g(z)
s
r
C 1 ′
C′ 2
φ 2 φ 1
w 0
w 1
w 2
x
Figure 24.3 Two curvesC 1 andC 2 in thez-plane, which are mapped onto
C 1 ′andC′ 2 in thew-plane.
important properties are that, except at points at whichg′(z), and henceh′(z), is
zero or infinite:
(i) continuous lines in thez-plane transform into continuous lines in the
w-plane;
(ii) the angle between two intersecting curves in thez-plane equals the angle
between the corresponding curves in thew-plane;
(iii) the magnification, as between thez-plane and thew-plane, of a small line
element in the neighbourhood of any particular point is independent of
the direction of the element;
(iv) any analytic function ofztransforms to an analytic function ofwand
vice versa.
Result (i) is immediate, and results (ii) and (iii) can be justified by the following
argument. Let two curvesC 1 andC 2 pass through the pointz 0 in thez-plane
and letz 1 andz 2 be two points on their respective tangents atz 0 , each a distance
ρfromz 0. The same prescription withwreplacingzdescribes the transformed
situation; however, the transformed tangents may not be straight lines and the
distances ofw 1 andw 2 fromw 0 have not yet been shown to be equal. This
situation is illustrated in figure 24.3.
In thez-planez 1 andz 2 are given by
z 1 −z 0 =ρexpiθ 1 and z 2 −z 0 =ρexpiθ 2.
The corresponding descriptions in thew-plane are
w 1 −w 0 =ρ 1 expiφ 1 and w 2 −w 0 =ρ 2 expiφ 2.
The anglesθiandφiare clear from figure 24.3. The transformed anglesφiare
those made with ther-axis by the tangents to the transformed curves at their