Linear fractional transformation fixing a line

In summary, the conversation discusses the search for a set of all linear fractional transformations of the unit disc that map specific points. It is noted that such transformations send lines to lines and circles to circles and fix the real axis. However, the only functions found do not meet all the conditions, leading to the conclusion that the set is empty. The conversation also explores the possibility of a function that satisfies some conditions but maps the real axis into a circle.
  • #1
pantboio
45
0
I'm trying to find the set $\mathscr{F}$ of all linear fractional transformations (l.f.t.) of the unit disc D in itself which map 1 in 1, -1 in -1 and i in -i. By l.f.t. i mean a function$$f(z)=\frac{az+b}{cz+d}$$with $a,b,c,d\in\mathbb C$, $ad-bc\neq0$.I know that this kind of maps sends lines to lines and circles to circles. In this particular case, $f$ fixes the real axis. The only functions i found are $f(z)=\frac{1}{z}$ and $f(z)=\overline z$ , but the first doesn't map the unit disc in itself and the second is not a l.f.m. So should i conclude that $\mathscr{F}=\varnothing$?
 
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  • #2
pantboio said:
I'm trying to find the set $\mathscr{F}$ of all linear fractional transformations (l.f.t.) of the unit disc D in itself which map 1 in 1, -1 in -1 and i in -i. By l.f.t. i mean a function$$f(z)=\frac{az+b}{cz+d}$$with $a,b,c,d\in\mathbb C$, $ad-bc\neq0$.I know that this kind of maps sends lines to lines and circles to circles. In this particular case, $f$ fixes the real axis. The only functions i found are $f(z)=\frac{1}{z}$ and $f(z)=\overline z$ , but the first doesn't map the unit disc in itself and the second is not a l.f.m. So should i conclude that $\mathscr{F}=\varnothing$?
A linear fractional transformation is uniquely specified by three points and their images. You have already found the (unique) LFT taking $1$ to $1$, $-1$ to $-1$ and $i$ to $-i$, namely $f(z) = 1/z$. Since this does not take the unit disc to itself, you are right to conclude that $\mathscr{F}=\varnothing.$
 
  • #3
pantboio said:
I'm trying to find the set $\mathscr{F}$ of all linear fractional transformations (l.f.t.) of the unit disc D in itself which map 1 in 1, -1 in -1 and i in -i. By l.f.t. i mean a function$$f(z)=\frac{az+b}{cz+d}$$with $a,b,c,d\in\mathbb C$, $ad-bc\neq0$.I know that this kind of maps sends lines to lines and circles to circles. In this particular case, $f$ fixes the real axis. The only functions i found are $f(z)=\frac{1}{z}$ and $f(z)=\overline z$ , but the first doesn't map the unit disc in itself and the second is not a l.f.m. So should i conclude that $\mathscr{F}=\varnothing$?

Why $f(z)=\frac{1}{z}$ don't map the unit disk in itself?... Setting $z= e^{i\ \theta}$ is $f(z)=e^{-i\ \theta}$... right?... and, of course, $f(z)= \frac{1}{z}$ when is a=0, b=1, c=1, d=0... Kind regards $\chi$ $\sigma$
 
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  • #4
chisigma said:
Why $f(z)=\frac{1}{z}$ don't map the unit disk in itself?... Setting $z= e^{i\ \theta}$ is $f(z)=e^{-i\ \theta}$... right?...
In English, "disc" means "circle together with its interior". Maybe Italian distinguishes between these two concepts in a different way? :)

Kind regards,

Opalg (Handshake)
 
  • #5
chisigma said:
Why $f(z)=\frac{1}{z}$ don't map the unit disk in itself?... Setting $z= e^{i\ \theta}$ is $f(z)=e^{-i\ \theta}$... right?... Kind regards $\chi$ $\sigma$
By unit disc i mean the set of complex numbers with modulus less than 1, not only the unit circle
 
  • #6
pantboio said:
I'm trying to find the set $\mathscr{F}$ of all linear fractional transformations (l.f.t.) of the unit disc D in itself which map 1 in 1, -1 in -1 and i in -i. By l.f.t. i mean a function$$f(z)=\frac{az+b}{cz+d}$$with $a,b,c,d\in\mathbb C$, $ad-bc\neq0$.I know that this kind of maps sends lines to lines and circles to circles. In this particular case, $f$ fixes the real axis.
i'm no longer sure if what i said is correct. We have seen that such a function doesn't exist. But suppose it exists, with this property:
1) $f$ is a fractional linear transformation
2)$f$ map the unit disc onto itself
3)$f$ fixes 1 and -1, and maps i to -i

Can i conclude that $f$ fixes the real axis? Couldn't it happen that $f$ maps the real axis into a circle?
 
  • #7
pantboio said:
i'm no longer sure if what i said is correct. We have seen that such a function doesn't exist. But suppose it exists, with this property:
1) $f$ is a fractional linear transformation
2)$f$ map the unit disc onto itself
3)$f$ fixes 1 and -1, and maps i to -i

Can i conclude that $f$ fixes the real axis? Couldn't it happen that $f$ maps the real axis into a circle?
You have already seen that there is no function satisfying all three of those conditions. So forget (2) and part of (3), and suppose that $f$ is a fractional linear transformation that fixes 1 and -1. Then yes, it could happen that $f$ maps the real axis into a circle. If $L$ denotes the set of lines and $C$ denotes the set of circles, then a fractional linear transformation always maps $L\cup C$ to $L\cup C$. But it does not need to map $L$ to $L$, or $C$ to $C$.
 
  • #8
Opalg said:
You have already seen that there is no function satisfying all three of those conditions. So forget (2) and part of (3), and suppose that $f$ is a fractional linear transformation that fixes 1 and -1. Then yes, it could happen that $f$ maps the real axis into a circle. If $L$ denotes the set of lines and $C$ denotes the set of circles, then a fractional linear transformation always maps $L\cup C$ to $L\cup C$. But it does not need to map $L$ to $L$, or $C$ to $C$.
tell me if I'm right: substitute condition 3) with the following:3')$f$ fixes 1. So
1)$f$ is fractional linear map
2)$f$ maps the unit disc in itself
3') $f$ fixes 1
I want to prove that, in this particular case, $f$ maps real axis in real axis (so a line into a line, non into a circle). I remember that all fractional linear of unit disc have the form (up to a rotation)

$$f(z)=\frac{z-a}{1-\overline a z}$$
for $|a|<1$. Condition 3') implies that $a$ must be real. Hence $f$ maps real numbers to real numbers
 
  • #9
pantboio said:
tell me if I'm right: substitute condition 3) with the following:3')$f$ fixes 1. So
1)$f$ is fractional linear map
2)$f$ maps the unit disc in itself
3') $f$ fixes 1
I want to prove that, in this particular case, $f$ maps real axis in real axis (so a line into a line, non into a circle). I remember that all fractional linear of unit disc have the form (up to a rotation)

$$f(z)=\frac{z-a}{1-\overline a z}$$
for $|a|<1$. Condition 3') implies that $a$ must be real. Hence $f$ maps real numbers to real numbers
That argument is incorrect, because you are neglecting the rotation. The general form for an FLT is $$f(z)=\lambda\frac{z-a}{1-\overline a z},$$ where $|a|<1$ and $|\lambda|=1.$ It is quite possible for the fraction $\frac{z-a}{1-\overline a z}$ to shift the point 1 to some other point on the circle, and then for the rotation by $\lambda$ to shift it back to 1.

For example, if $a = \frac12(1+i)$ and $\lambda = i$ then the map becomes $$f(z)=\frac{i(2z-1-i)}{2-(1-i)z}.$$ You can check that this fixes $1$ but not $-1$, and it takes the real axis to a circle.
 
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  • #10
Opalg said:
That argument is incorrect, because you are neglecting the rotation. The general form for an FLT is $$f(z)=\lambda\frac{z-a}{1-\overline a z},$$ where $|a|<1$ and $|\lambda|=1.$ It is quite possible for the fraction $\frac{z-a}{1-\overline a z}$ to shift the point 1 to some other point on the circle, and then for the rotation by $\lambda$ to shift it back to 1.

For example, if $a = \frac12(1+i)$ and $\lambda = i$ then the map becomes $$f(z)=\frac{2z-1-i}{2-(1-i)z}.$$ You can check that this fixes $1$ but not $-1$, and it takes the real axis to a circle.
Thank you very much. Let's see if i can state something correct. Let $f$ satisfie the following conditions:
1)$f$ is a linear fractional map;
2)$f$ maps the unit disc in itself;
3)$f$ fixes 1 and -1.
Hence $f$ is the identity.
proof: $f$ has the form
$$f(z)=\lambda\frac{z-a}{1-\overline a z}$$
for some $|\lambda|=1$. Condition 3) implies
$$\lambda=1$$
Thus
$$f(z)=\frac{z-a}{1-\overline a z}$$
and again by 3) i get $a$ real. Hence $f$ has infinite fixed points in the unit disc ( the real segment (-1,1) ). By identity principle for holomorphic function, i conclude $f=id$
 
  • #11
pantboio said:
Thank you very much. Let's see if i can state something correct. Let $f$ satisfie the following conditions:
1)$f$ is a linear fractional map;
2)$f$ maps the unit disc in itself;
3)$f$ fixes 1 and -1.
Hence $f$ is the identity.
proof: $f$ has the form
$$f(z)=\lambda\frac{z-a}{1-\overline a z}$$
for some $|\lambda|=1$. Condition 3) implies
$$\lambda=1$$
Thus
$$f(z)=\frac{z-a}{1-\overline a z}$$
and again by 3) i get $a$ real. Hence $f$ has infinite fixed points in the unit disc ( the real segment (-1,1) ). By identity principle for holomorphic function, i conclude $f=id$
Sorry to disappoint you, but this is still not right. (Crying)

You are correct that those conditions imply that $f(z)=\frac{z-a}{1-a z}$ for some real $a$ with $|a|<1$. But it does not follow that $f$ fixes the segment (-1,1), unless $a=0$. More precisely, it maps that segment to itself, but it does not fix each point in the segment. In fact, it stretches part of the segment and shrinks another part.

You can see for example that $f(0)=-a$. The only value of $a$ for which $f$ fixes the whole segment is $a=0$. In that case only, $f$ becomes the identity map.
 
  • #12
what I'm trying to do is to generalize the original situation, where $f$ fixes 1 and -1 and maps i to -i. But i probably considered the wrong way, since f doesn't fix a line, it fixes the unit circle. So what I'm looking for is some result that states something as: if $f$ is a l.f.t. that fixes a circle (not necessarily the unit one) then...i don't know, then it's is a rotation, or it is an inversion...and by this carachterization i would like to deduce that there are no such maps sending i to -i and fixing 1 and -1 (even if i know there is a very easy way to see this, as we noticed in previous posts)
 

Related to Linear fractional transformation fixing a line

What is a linear fractional transformation fixing a line?

A linear fractional transformation that fixes a line is a type of mathematical function that maps points in the complex plane to other points in the complex plane while keeping a specific line in the complex plane fixed. This transformation can be expressed as a ratio of two linear functions in the form of (az + b)/(cz + d), where a, b, c, and d are complex numbers and z is a variable representing a point in the complex plane.

How does a linear fractional transformation fix a line?

A linear fractional transformation fixes a line by preserving the cross-ratio of four points on the line. This means that when four points are mapped to their images, the ratio of the distances between the points remains the same. In other words, the transformation keeps the relative positions of points on the line unchanged, thus fixing the line.

What is the significance of a linear fractional transformation fixing a line?

The significance of a linear fractional transformation fixing a line lies in its applications in geometry, complex analysis, and projective geometry. It allows for the manipulation and transformation of points and lines in the complex plane, making it a useful tool in solving problems in these fields.

How is a linear fractional transformation fixing a line different from a general linear transformation?

A linear fractional transformation fixing a line is a special case of a general linear transformation. The main difference is that a linear fractional transformation keeps a specific line fixed while a general linear transformation can map any line to another line. Additionally, a linear fractional transformation can have at most two fixed points, while a general linear transformation can have any number of fixed points.

What are the properties of a linear fractional transformation fixing a line?

Some key properties of a linear fractional transformation fixing a line include preserving angles and circles, mapping infinity to itself, and having at most two fixed points. It also has a unique inverse, and the composition of two linear fractional transformations fixing a line is also a linear fractional transformation fixing a line.

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