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Möbius transformations

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Möbius transformations
NameMöbius transformations
FieldComplex analysis, Geometry, Algebra
Introduced19th century
Notable peopleAugust Ferdinand Möbius, Carl Friedrich Gauss, Henri Poincaré, Felix Klein, Bernhard Riemann, Évariste Galois

Möbius transformations are bijective rational maps of the extended complex plane arising from fractional linear expressions; they form a fundamental class of conformal self-maps closely tied to August Ferdinand Möbius, Carl Friedrich Gauss, Bernhard Riemann, and Henri Poincaré. These maps encode symmetries studied by Felix Klein and appear throughout hyperbolic geometry, complex analysis, projective geometry, and mathematical physics such as in the work of Évariste Galois and Sophus Lie. Their algebraic, geometric, and dynamical aspects connect to structures familiar from Klein bottle, Riemann sphere, Modular group, Lorentz group, and Teichmüller theory.

Definition and basic properties

A transformation is given by a fractional linear formula with complex coefficients that defines a bijection of the Riemann sphere, a construction intimately related to the legacy of August Ferdinand Möbius and the uniformization ideas of Bernhard Riemann. Basic properties include conformality away from singularities, preservation of oriented angles as in the studies by Henri Poincaré and Felix Klein, and closure under composition with inverses, echoing themes in Évariste Galois's group perspectives and Carl Friedrich Gauss's complex function theory. These maps serve as automorphisms of the Riemann sphere studied in contexts including Modular group actions, Teichmüller theory moduli problems, and classical results exploited by George Gabriel Stokes and Joseph Liouville.

Matrix representation and group structure

Every transformation corresponds to a nonzero 2×2 complex matrix up to scalar multiplication, reflecting links to Linear algebra, Projective linear group, and the algebraic structures used by Évariste Galois and Felix Klein. The matrices form a group isomorphic to the projective special linear group PSL(2,C), a connection leveraged in the classification of discrete subgroups such as those studied by Henri Poincaré in his work on Fuchsian groups and by Kurt Reidemeister in knot theoretic contexts. Relations between PSL(2,C) and the Lorentz group and correspondences with SL(2,R) underlie deep ties to the symmetry analyses of Albert Einstein and to representation theory pursued in the tradition of Hermann Weyl.

Action on the extended complex plane

As homeomorphisms of the Riemann sphere, these maps act transitively on triples of distinct points, a fact used in normalization arguments by Bernhard Riemann and in coordinate constructions by Felix Klein. The action preserves circles and lines on the extended plane, a geometric feature exploited in classical problems studied by August Ferdinand Möbius and later used in conformal mapping techniques related to work by Carl Ludwig Siegel and Gaston Julia. Iteration of such actions gave rise to dynamical studies pursued by Pierre Fatou and Gaston Julia leading to connections with modern complex dynamics and fractal sets investigated by Benoît Mandelbrot.

Geometric properties and classification

Transformations are classified as elliptic, parabolic, hyperbolic, or loxodromic based on eigenvalue data of associated matrices, a taxonomy that resonates with classifications in Henri Poincaré's studies of isometries and the spectral analyses familiar from David Hilbert's operator theory. Geometric invariants include preservation of cross-ratios and circle sets, topics linked historically to August Ferdinand Möbius and developed in projective treatments by Jean-Victor Poncelet and Giulio Carlo de' Toschi di Fagnano. The classification informs fixed-point structure, stability behavior, and discrete subgroup geometry examined in the work of André Weil and Ahlfors.

Fixed points, cross-ratio, and invariants

Fixed-point analysis reduces to solving quadratic equations determined by matrix coefficients, a technique that echoes algebraic methods from Évariste Galois and computational approaches used by Carl Friedrich Gauss. The cross-ratio provides a complete invariant for four ordered points on the sphere and remains unchanged under these maps, a classical projective invariant exploited by Jean V. Poncelet and employed in proofs by Bernhard Riemann and Felix Klein. Other invariants connect to traces of matrices and to moduli parameters central to Teichmüller theory, Kleinian groups, and deformation spaces studied by William Thurston.

Applications and examples

Concrete examples include translations, rotations, dilations, inversions, and combinations used in conformal welding problems treated by Lars Ahlfors and in boundary value problems considered by Rolf Nevanlinna. Applications range across conformal mapping techniques in hydrodynamics historically influenced by Lord Kelvin and George Stokes, uniformization results used by Henri Poincaré in automorphic function theory, and scattering descriptions in mathematical physics that echo the symmetry analyses of Paul Dirac and Richard Feynman. Discrete subgroups generate tessellations studied by Poincaré and Kleinian schools, with modern computational explorations inspired by Benoît Mandelbrot and John Conway.

Generalizations include higher-dimensional projective linear maps studied in Felix Klein's Erlangen Program, Möbius-like actions in quaternionic and Clifford algebra settings connected to work by William Rowan Hamilton and Clifford; discrete analogues such as Schottky groups analyzed by Lipman Bers; and q-deformations and noncommutative analogues investigated in operator algebra contexts influenced by John von Neumann and Alain Connes. Relations to the Modular group, Teichmüller theory, and modern representation-theoretic frameworks reflect continuing interplay with the mathematical legacies of Bernhard Riemann, Évariste Galois, and Felix Klein.

Category:Complex analysisCategory:Conformal mappingsCategory:Projective geometry