Stereographic projection is conformal

From Companal
Revision as of 14:13, 27 April 2008 by Vipul (talk | contribs)

Statement

Setup

Further information: Stereographic projection

Consider R3, three-dimensional Euclidean space, with coordinates x,y,z. Denote:

S2:={(x,y,z)R3x2+y2+z2=1}

Identify C with the xy-plane under the map:

(x,y,0)x+iy

Let N=(0,0,1) denote the north pole in S2, and define the stereographic projection as a bijective map:

S2{N}C

which sends a point PS2{N} to the unique point in C that is collinear with N and P.

Actual statement

Pick any point PS2{N}. Then there is a natural induced map from the tangent space to P in S2 to the tangent space to its image, in C. This map is conformal, i.e. it preserves angles.

In other words, if we make two smooth curves in S2 that intersect at P, the angle of intersection between those curves at P equals the angle of intersection of their images under stereographic projection.