Conformal mapping. From an ellipse to a rectangle

traianus
Messages
80
Reaction score
0
Is it possible to transform an ellipse

x^2/a^2 + y^2/b^2 = 1 ("a" minor or major semiaxis)

Into a rectangle?
If so, how can I do it? I am not very familiar so please explain all the details. I know the transformation from a circle to an airfoil, but not this one.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Conformally? I don't think so. Conformal mappings preserve angles.
 
I know that there is a transformation from a rectangle to an ellipse (book advanced enginnering mathematics by Kreyszig) but it is not conformal somewhere
 
Like I just said, conformal mappings preserve angles. There are at least four places where a rect-angle ('rect' means 'right', 'angle' means 'angle') cannot be mapped conformally to an ellipse. Are there any right angles on the boundary of an ellipse?
 
AKG, what you are saying is obvious and I knew it. But, except these four points, is there a transformation?
 
Are you really looking to turn an ellipse into a rectangle, or are you more interested in their interiors?
 
I am trying to transform the ellipse into a rectangle
 
traianus said:
I know that there is a transformation from a rectangle to an ellipse (book advanced enginnering mathematics by Kreyszig) but it is not conformal somewhere

Hi, I found your quote while doing a search for transforming a rectangle to an ellipse. I found the book you mentioned and could not find the information I am looking for.

Can anyone assist me in finding out how to transform a rectangle into an ellipse?

Thanks
 
What you can do is map the ellipse to the real axis and map the real axis to a regular 4-sided polygon using Schwartz-Christoffel.
 

Similar threads

Back
Top