In
mathematics
Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, the Beltrami equation, named after
Eugenio Beltrami
Eugenio Beltrami (16 November 1835 – 18 February 1900) was an Italian mathematician notable for his work concerning differential geometry and mathematical physics. His work was noted especially for clarity of exposition. He was the first to ...
, is the
partial differential equation
In mathematics, a partial differential equation (PDE) is an equation which involves a multivariable function and one or more of its partial derivatives.
The function is often thought of as an "unknown" that solves the equation, similar to ho ...
:
for ''w'' a complex distribution of the
complex variable ''z'' in some open set ''U'', with derivatives that are locally
''L''2, and where ''μ'' is a given complex function in
''L''∞(''U'') of norm less than 1, called the Beltrami coefficient, and where
and
are
Wirtinger derivatives. Classically this differential equation was used by
Gauss
Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss (; ; ; 30 April 177723 February 1855) was a German mathematician, astronomer, Geodesy, geodesist, and physicist, who contributed to many fields in mathematics and science. He was director of the Göttingen Observat ...
to prove the existence locally of
isothermal coordinates In mathematics, specifically in differential geometry, isothermal coordinates on a Riemannian manifold are local coordinates where the metric is conformal to the Euclidean metric. This means that in isothermal coordinates, the Riemannian metric ...
on a surface with analytic
Riemannian metric
In differential geometry, a Riemannian manifold is a geometric space on which many geometric notions such as distance, angles, length, volume, and curvature are defined. Euclidean space, the N-sphere, n-sphere, hyperbolic space, and smooth surf ...
. Various techniques have been developed for solving the equation. The most powerful, developed in the 1950s, provides global solutions of the equation on C and relies on the
L''p'' theory of the
Beurling transform, a
singular integral operator defined on L
''p''(C) for all 1 < ''p'' < ∞. The same method applies equally well on the
unit disk
In mathematics, the open unit disk (or disc) around ''P'' (where ''P'' is a given point in the plane), is the set of points whose distance from ''P'' is less than 1:
:D_1(P) = \.\,
The closed unit disk around ''P'' is the set of points whose d ...
and
upper half plane and plays a fundamental role in
Teichmüller theory and the theory of
quasiconformal mappings. Various
uniformization theorem
In mathematics, the uniformization theorem states that every simply connected Riemann surface is conformally equivalent to one of three Riemann surfaces: the open unit disk, the complex plane, or the Riemann sphere. The theorem is a generali ...
s can be proved using the equation, including the
measurable Riemann mapping theorem and the
simultaneous uniformization theorem. The existence of
conformal weldings can also be derived using the Beltrami equation. One of the simplest applications is to the
Riemann mapping theorem
In complex analysis, the Riemann mapping theorem states that if U is a non-empty simply connected open subset of the complex number plane \mathbb which is not all of \mathbb, then there exists a biholomorphic mapping f (i.e. a bijective hol ...
for simply connected bounded open domains in the complex plane. When the domain has smooth boundary,
elliptic regularity In the theory of partial differential equations, a partial differential operator P defined on an open subset
:U \subset^n
is called hypoelliptic if for every distribution u defined on an open subset V \subset U such that Pu is C^\infty ( sm ...
for the equation can be used to show that the uniformizing map from the unit disk to the domain extends to a C
∞ function from the closed disk to the closure of the domain.
Metrics on planar domains
Consider a 2-dimensional
Riemannian manifold
In differential geometry, a Riemannian manifold is a geometric space on which many geometric notions such as distance, angles, length, volume, and curvature are defined. Euclidean space, the N-sphere, n-sphere, hyperbolic space, and smooth surf ...
, say with an (''x'', ''y'') coordinate system on it. The curves of constant ''x'' on that surface typically don't intersect the curves of constant ''y'' orthogonally. A new coordinate system (''u'', ''v'') is called
isothermal
An isothermal process is a type of thermodynamic process in which the temperature ''T'' of a system remains constant: Δ''T'' = 0. This typically occurs when a system is in contact with an outside thermal reservoir, and a change in the sys ...
when the curves of constant ''u'' do intersect the curves of constant ''v'' orthogonally and, in addition, the parameter spacing is the same — that is, for small enough ''h'', the little region with
and
is nearly square, not just nearly rectangular. The Beltrami equation is the equation that has to be solved in order to construct isothermal coordinate systems.
To see how this works, let ''S'' be an open set in C and let
:
be a smooth metric ''g'' on ''S''. The
first fundamental form
In differential geometry, the first fundamental form is the inner product on the tangent space of a surface in three-dimensional Euclidean space which is induced canonically from the dot product of . It permits the calculation of curvature and ...
of ''g''
:
is a positive real matrix (''E'' > 0, ''G'' > 0, ''EG'' − ''F''
2 > 0) that varies smoothly with ''x'' and ''y''.
The Beltrami coefficient of the metric ''g'' is defined to be
:
This coefficient has modulus strictly less than one since the identity
:
implies that
:
Let ''f''(''x'',''y'') =(''u''(''x'',''y''),''v''(''x'',''y'')) be a smooth diffeomorphism of ''S'' onto another open set ''T'' in C. The map ''f'' preserves orientation just when its
Jacobian is positive:
:
And using ''f'' to pull back to ''S'' the standard Euclidean metric ''ds''
2 = ''du''
2 + ''dv''
2 on ''T'' induces a metric on ''S'' given by
:
a metric whose first fundamental form is
:
When ''f'' both preserves orientation and induces a metric that differs from the original metric ''g'' only by a positive, smoothly varying scale factor ''r''(''x'', ''y''), the new coordinates ''u'' and ''v'' defined on ''S'' by ''f'' are called
isothermal coordinates In mathematics, specifically in differential geometry, isothermal coordinates on a Riemannian manifold are local coordinates where the metric is conformal to the Euclidean metric. This means that in isothermal coordinates, the Riemannian metric ...
.
To determine when this happens, we reinterpret ''f'' as a complex-valued function of a complex variable ''f''(''x''+i''y'') = ''u''(''x''+i''y'') + i''v''(''x''+i''y'') so that we can apply the
Wirtinger derivatives:
:
Since
:
:
the metric induced by ''f'' is given by
:
The Beltrami quotient of this induced metric is defined to be
.
The Beltrami quotient
of
equals the Beltrami coefficient
of the original metric ''g'' just when
:
:::
The real and imaginary parts of this identity linearly relate
and
and solving for
and
gives
:
It follows that the metric induced by ''f'' is then ''r''(''x'', ''y'') ''g''(''x'',''y''), where
which is positive, while the Jacobian of ''f'' is then
which is also positive. So, when
the new coordinate system given by ''f'' is isothermal.
Conversely, consider a diffeomorphism ''f'' that does give us isothermal coordinates. We then have
:
where the scale factor ''r''(''x'', ''y'') has dropped out and the expression inside the square root is the perfect square
Since ''f'' must preserve orientation to give isothermal coordinates, the Jacobian
is the positive square root; so we have
:
The right-hand factors in the numerator and denominator are equal and, since the Jacobian is positive, their common value can't be zero; so
Thus, the local coordinate system given by a diffeomorphism ''f'' is isothermal just when ''f'' solves the Beltrami equation for
Isothermal coordinates for analytic metrics
Gauss
Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss (; ; ; 30 April 177723 February 1855) was a German mathematician, astronomer, Geodesy, geodesist, and physicist, who contributed to many fields in mathematics and science. He was director of the Göttingen Observat ...
proved the existence of isothermal coordinates locally in the analytic case by reducing the Beltrami to an ordinary differential equation in the complex domain. Here is a cookbook presentation of Gauss's technique.
An isothermal coordinate system, say in a neighborhood of the origin (''x'', ''y'') = (0, 0), is given by the real and imaginary parts of a complex-valued function ''f''(''x'', ''y'') that satisfies
:
Let
be such a function, and let
be a complex-valued function of a complex variable that is
holomorphic
In mathematics, a holomorphic function is a complex-valued function of one or more complex variables that is complex differentiable in a neighbourhood of each point in a domain in complex coordinate space . The existence of a complex deri ...
and whose derivative is nowhere zero. Since any holomorphic function
has
identically zero, we have
:
Thus, the coordinate system given by the real and imaginary parts of
is also isothermal. Indeed, if we fix
to give one isothermal coordinate system, then all of the possible isothermal coordinate systems are given by
for the various holomorphic
with nonzero derivative.
When ''E'', ''F'', and ''G'' are real analytic, Gauss constructed a particular isothermal coordinate system
the one that he chose being the one with
for all ''x''. So the ''u'' axis of his isothermal coordinate system coincides with the ''x'' axis of the original coordinates and is parameterized in the same way. All other isothermal coordinate systems are then of the form
for a holomorphic
with nonzero derivative.
Gauss lets ''q''(''t'') be some complex-valued function of a real variable ''t'' that satisfies the following ordinary differential equation:
:
where ''E'', ''F'', and ''G'' are here evaluated at ''y'' = ''t'' and ''x'' = ''q''(''t''). If we specify the value of ''q''(''s'') for some start value ''s'', this differential equation determines the values of ''q''(''t'') for ''t'' either less than or greater than ''s''. Gauss then defines his isothermal coordinate system ''h'' by setting ''h''(''x'', ''y'') to be
along the solution path of that differential equation that passes through the point (''x'', ''y''), and thus has ''q''(''y'') = ''x''.
This rule sets ''h''(''x'', 0) to be
, since the starting condition is then ''q''(0)=''x''. More generally, suppose that we move by an infinitesimal vector (''dx'', ''dy'') away from some point (''x'', ''y''), where ''dx'' and ''dy'' satisfy
:
Since
, the vector (''dx'', ''dy'') is then tangent to the solution curve of the differential equation that passes through the point (''x'', ''y''). Because we are assuming the metric to be analytic, it follows that
:
for some smooth, complex-valued function
We thus have
:
:
We form the quotient
and then multiply numerator and denominator by
, which is the complex conjugate of the denominator. Simplifying the result, we find that
:
Gauss's function ''h'' thus gives the desired isothermal coordinates.
Solution in ''L''2 for smooth Beltrami coefficients
In the simplest cases the Beltrami equation can be solved using only Hilbert space techniques and the Fourier transform. The method of proof is the prototype for the general solution using L
''p'' spaces, although
Adrien Douady
Adrien Douady (; 25 September 1935 – 2 November 2006) was a French mathematician born in La Tronche, Isère. He was the son of Daniel Douady and Guilhen Douady.
Douady was a student of Henri Cartan at the École normale supérieure, and initi ...
has indicated a method for handling the general case using only Hilbert spaces: the method relies on the classical theory of
quasiconformal mappings to establish Hölder estimates that are automatic in the L
''p'' theory for ''p'' > 2.
Let ''T'' be the
Beurling transform on L
2(C) defined on the Fourier transform of an L
2 function ''f'' as a multiplication operator:
:
It is a unitary operator and if ''f'' is a tempered distribution on C with partial derivatives in
L
2 then
:
where the subscripts denote complex partial derivatives.
The
fundamental solution
In mathematics, a fundamental solution for a linear partial differential operator is a formulation in the language of distribution theory of the older idea of a Green's function (although unlike Green's functions, fundamental solutions do not ...
of the operator
:
is given by the distribution
:
a locally integrable function on C. Thus on
Schwartz function
In mathematics, Schwartz space \mathcal is the function space of all functions whose derivatives are rapidly decreasing. This space has the important property that the Fourier transform is an automorphism on this space. This property enables ...
s ''f''
:
The same holds for distributions of compact support on C. In particular if ''f'' is an L
2 function with compact support, then its Cauchy transform, defined as
:
is locally square integrable. The above equation can be written
:
Moreover, still regarding ''f'' and ''Cf'' as distributions,
:
Indeed, the operator ''D'' is given on Fourier transforms as multiplication by ''iz''/2 and ''C'' as multiplication by its inverse.
Now in the Beltrami equation
:
with ''μ'' a smooth function of compact support, set
:
and assume that the first derivatives of ''g'' are L
2. Let ''h'' = ''g''
''z'' = ''f''
''z'' – 1. Then
:
If ''A'' and ''B'' are the operators defined by
:
then their operator norms are strictly less than 1 and
:
Hence
:
where the right hand sides can be expanded as
Neumann series. It follows that
:
has the same support as ''μ'' and ''g''. Hence ''f'' is given by
:
Elliptic regularity In the theory of partial differential equations, a partial differential operator P defined on an open subset
:U \subset^n
is called hypoelliptic if for every distribution u defined on an open subset V \subset U such that Pu is C^\infty ( sm ...
can now be used to deduce that ''f'' is smooth.
In fact, off the support of ''μ'',
:
so by
Weyl's lemma ''f'' is even holomorphic for , ''z'', > ''R''. Since ''f'' = ''CT*h'' + ''z'', it follows that
''f'' tends to 0 uniformly as , ''z'', tends to ∞.
The elliptic regularity argument to prove smoothness, however, is the same everywhere and uses the theory of L
2 Sobolev spaces on the torus. Let ψ be a smooth function of compact support on C, identically equal to 1 on a neighbourhood of the support of ''μ'' and set ''F'' = ''ψ'' ''f''. The support of ''F'' lies in a large square , ''x'', , , ''y'', ≤ ''R'', so, identifying opposite sides of the square, ''F'' and ''μ'' can be regarded as a distribution and smooth function on a torus T
2. By construction ''F'' is in ''L''
2(T
2). As a distribution on T
2 it satisfies
:
where ''G'' is smooth. On the canonical basis ''e''
''m'' of L
2(T
2) with ''m'' in Z + ''i'' Z, define
:
Thus ''U'' is a unitary and on trigonometric polynomials or smooth functions ''P''
:
Similarly it extends to a unitary on each
Sobolev space
In mathematics, a Sobolev space is a vector space of functions equipped with a norm that is a combination of ''Lp''-norms of the function together with its derivatives up to a given order. The derivatives are understood in a suitable weak sense ...
H
''k''(T
2) with the same property. It is the counterpart on the torus of the Beurling transform. The standard theory of
Fredholm operator
In mathematics, Fredholm operators are certain operators that arise in the Fredholm theory of integral equations. They are named in honour of Erik Ivar Fredholm. By definition, a Fredholm operator is a bounded linear operator ''T'' :  ...
s shows that the operators corresponding to ''I'' – ''μ'' ''U'' and ''I'' – ''U'' ''μ'' are invertible on each Sobolev space. On the other hand,
:
Since ''UG'' is smooth, so too is (''I'' – ''μU'')''F'' and hence also ''F''.
Thus the original function ''f'' is smooth. Regarded as a map of C = R
2 into itself, the Jacobian is given by
:
This Jacobian is nowhere vanishing by a classical argument of . In fact formally writing
''f''
''z'' = ''e''
''k'', it follows that
:
This equation for ''k'' can be solved by the same methods as above giving a solution tending to 0 at ∞.
By uniqueness ''h'' + 1 = ''e''
''k'' so that
:
is nowhere vanishing. Since ''f'' induces a smooth map of the Riemann sphere C ∪ ∞ into itself which is locally a diffeomorphism, ''f'' must be a diffeomorphism. In fact ''f'' must be onto by connectedness of the sphere, since its image is an open and closed subset; but then, as a
covering map
In topology, a covering or covering projection is a map between topological spaces that, intuitively, locally acts like a projection of multiple copies of a space onto itself. In particular, coverings are special types of local homeomorphisms ...
, ''f'' must cover each point of the sphere the same number of times. Since only ∞ is sent to ∞, it follows that ''f'' is one-to-one.
The solution ''f'' is a quasiconformal conformal diffeomorphism. These form a group and their Beltrami coefficients can be computed according to the following rule:
:
Moreover, if ''f''(0) = 0 and
:
then
:
This formula reflects the fact that on a
Riemann surface
In mathematics, particularly in complex analysis, a Riemann surface is a connected one-dimensional complex manifold. These surfaces were first studied by and are named after Bernhard Riemann. Riemann surfaces can be thought of as deformed vers ...
, a Beltrami coefficient is not a function.
Under a holomorphic change of coordinate ''w'' = ''w''(''z''), the coefficient is transformed to
:
Defining a smooth Beltrami coefficient on the sphere in this way, if ''μ'' is such a coefficient then, taking a smooth
bump function
In mathematical analysis, a bump function (also called a test function) is a function f : \Reals^n \to \Reals on a Euclidean space \Reals^n which is both smooth (in the sense of having continuous derivatives of all orders) and compactly supp ...
ψ equal to 0 near 0, equal 1 for , ''z'', > 1 and satisfying 0 ≤ ''ψ'' ≤ 1, ''μ'' can be written as a sum of two Beltrami coefficients:
:
Let ''g'' be the quasiconformal diffeomorphism of the sphere fixing 0 and ∞ with coefficient
''μ''
∞. Let λ be the Beltrami coefficient of compact support on C defined by
:
If ''f'' is the quasiconformal diffeomorphism of the sphere fixing 0 and ∞ with coefficient λ, then
the transformation formulas above show that ''f''
''g''
−1 is a quasiconformal diffeomorphism of the sphere fixing 0 and ∞ with coefficient ''μ''.
The solutions of Beltrami's equation restrict to diffeomorphisms of the upper halfplane or unit disk if the coefficient ''μ'' has extra symmetry properties; since the two regions are related by a Möbius transformation (the Cayley transform), the two cases are essentially the same.
For the upper halfplane Im ''z'' > 0, if ''μ'' satisfies
:
then by uniqueness the solution ''f'' of the Beltrami equation satisfies
:
so leaves the real axis and hence the upper halfplane invariant.
Similarly for the unit disc , ''z'', < 1, if ''μ'' satisfies
:
then by uniqueness the solution ''f'' of the Beltrami equation satisfies
:
so leaves the unit circle and hence the unit disk invariant.
Conversely Beltrami coefficients defined on the closures of the upper halfplane or unit disk which satisfy these conditions on the boundary can be "reflected" using the formulas above. If the extended functions are smooth the preceding theory can be applied. Otherwise the extensions will be continuous but with a jump in the derivatives at the boundary. In that case the more general theory for measurable coefficients ''μ'' is required and is most directly handled within the L
''p'' theory.
Smooth Riemann mapping theorem
Let ''U'' be an open simply connected domain in the complex plane with smooth boundary containing 0 in its interior and let ''F'' be a diffeomorphism of the unit disk ''D'' onto ''U'' extending smoothly to the boundary and the identity on a neighbourhood of 0. Suppose that in addition the induced metric on the closure of the unit disk can be reflected in the unit circle to define a smooth metric on C. The corresponding Beltrami coefficient is then a smooth function on C vanishing near 0 and ∞ and satisfying
:
The quasiconformal diffeomorphism ''h'' of C satisfying
:
preserves the unit circle together with its interior and exterior. From the composition formulas for Beltrami coefficients
:
so that ''f'' = ''F''
''h''
−1 is a smooth diffeomorphism between the closures of ''D'' and ''U'' which is holomorphic on the interior. Thus, if a suitable diffeomorphism ''F'' can be constructed, the mapping ''f'' proves the smooth
Riemann mapping theorem
In complex analysis, the Riemann mapping theorem states that if U is a non-empty simply connected open subset of the complex number plane \mathbb which is not all of \mathbb, then there exists a biholomorphic mapping f (i.e. a bijective hol ...
for the domain ''U''.
To produce a diffeomorphism ''F'' with the properties above, it can be assumed after an affine transformation that the boundary of ''U'' has length 2π and that 0 lies in ''U''. The smooth version of the
Schoenflies theorem produces a smooth diffeomorphism ''G'' from the closure of ''D'' onto the closure of ''u'' equal to the identity on a neighbourhood of 0 and with an explicit form on a tubular neighbourhood of the unit circle. In fact taking polar coordinates (''r'',''θ'') in ''R''
2 and letting (''x''(''θ''),''y''(''θ'')) (''θ'' in
,2 be a parametrization of ∂''U'' by arclength, ''G'' has the form
:
Taking ''t'' = 1 − ''r'' as parameter, the induced metric near the unit circle is given by
:
where
:
is the
curvature
In mathematics, curvature is any of several strongly related concepts in geometry that intuitively measure the amount by which a curve deviates from being a straight line or by which a surface deviates from being a plane. If a curve or su ...
of the
plane curve
In mathematics, a plane curve is a curve in a plane that may be a Euclidean plane, an affine plane or a projective plane. The most frequently studied cases are smooth plane curves (including piecewise smooth plane curves), and algebraic plane c ...
(''x''(''θ''),''y''(''θ'')).
Let
:
After a change of variable in the ''t'' coordinate and a conformal change in the metric, the metric takes the form
:
where ψ is an analytic real-valued function of ''t'':
:
A formal diffeomorphism sending (''θ'',''t'') to (''f''(''θ'',''t''),''t'') can be defined as a formal
power series
In mathematics, a power series (in one variable) is an infinite series of the form
\sum_^\infty a_n \left(x - c\right)^n = a_0 + a_1 (x - c) + a_2 (x - c)^2 + \dots
where ''a_n'' represents the coefficient of the ''n''th term and ''c'' is a co ...
in ''t'':
:
where the coefficients ''f''
''n'' are smooth functions on the circle. These coefficients can be defined by recurrence so that the transformed metric only has even powers of ''t'' in the coefficients. This condition is imposed by demanding that no odd powers of ''t'' appear in the formal power series expansion:
:
By
Borel's lemma
In mathematics, Borel's lemma, named after Émile Borel, is an important result used in the theory of asymptotic expansions and partial differential equations.
Statement
Suppose ''U'' is an open set in the Euclidean space R''n'', and suppose that ...
, there is a diffeomorphism defined in a neighbourhood of the unit circle, ''t'' = 0, for which the formal expression ''f''(''θ'',''t'') is the
Taylor series
In mathematics, the Taylor series or Taylor expansion of a function is an infinite sum of terms that are expressed in terms of the function's derivatives at a single point. For most common functions, the function and the sum of its Taylor ser ...
expansion in the ''t'' variable. It follows that, after composing with this diffeomorphism, the extension of the metric obtained by reflecting in the line ''t'' = 0 is smooth.
Hölder continuity of solutions
Douady and others have indicated ways to extend the ''L''
2 theory to prove the existence and uniqueness of solutions when the Beltrami coefficient ''μ'' is bounded and measurable with ''L''
∞ norm ''k'' strictly less than one. Their approach involved the theory of quasiconformal mappings to establish directly the solutions of Beltrami's equation when ''μ'' is smooth with fixed compact support are uniformly
Hölder continuous Hölder:
* ''Hölder, Hoelder'' as surname
* Hölder condition
* Hölder's inequality
In mathematical analysis, Hölder's inequality, named after Otto Hölder, is a fundamental inequality (mathematics), inequality between Lebesgue integration, in ...
. In the L
''p'' approach Hölder continuity follows automatically from operator theory.
The ''L''
''p'' theory when ''μ'' is smooth of compact support proceeds as in the L
2 case. By the
Calderón–Zygmund theory the Beurling transform and its inverse are known to be continuous for the L
''p'' norm. The
Riesz–Thorin convexity theorem implies that the norms ''C''
''p'' are continuous functions of ''p''. In particular ''C''
''p'' tends to 1 when ''p'' tends to 2.
In the Beltrami equation
:
with ''μ'' a smooth function of compact support, set
:
and assume that the first derivatives of ''g'' are L
''p''. Let ''h'' = ''g''
''z'' = ''f''
''z'' – 1. Then
:
If ''A'' and ''B'' are the operators defined by ''AF'' = ''TμF'' and ''BF'' = ''μTF'', then their operator norms are strictly less than 1 and (''I'' − ''A'')''h'' = ''T''μ. Hence
:
where the right hand sides can be expanded as
Neumann series. It follows that
:
has the same support as ''μ'' and ''g''. Hence, up to the addition of a constant, ''f'' is given by
:
Convergence of functions with fixed compact support in the L
''p'' norm for ''p'' > 2 implies convergence in
L
2, so these formulas are compatible with the L
2 theory if ''p'' > 2.
The Cauchy transform ''C'' is not continuous on L
2 except as a map into functions of
vanishing mean oscillation In harmonic analysis in mathematics, a function of bounded mean oscillation, also known as a BMO function, is a real-valued function whose mean oscillation is bounded (finite). The space of functions of bounded mean oscillation (BMO), is a function ...
.
On L
''p'' its image is contained in Hölder continuous functions with Hölder exponent 1 − 2''p''
−1 once a suitable constant is added. In fact for a function ''f'' of compact support define
:
Note that the constant is added so that ''Pf''(0) = 0. Since ''Pf'' only differs from ''Cf'' by a constant, it follows exactly as in the ''L''
2 theory that
:
Moreover, ''P'' can be used instead of ''C'' to produce a solution:
:
On the other hand, the integrand defining ''Pf'' is in L
''q'' if ''q''
−1 = 1 − ''p''
−1. The
Hölder inequality Hölder:
* ''Hölder, Hoelder'' as surname
* Hölder condition
* Hölder's inequality
In mathematical analysis, Hölder's inequality, named after Otto Hölder, is a fundamental inequality (mathematics), inequality between Lebesgue integration, in ...
implies that ''Pf'' is
Hölder continuous Hölder:
* ''Hölder, Hoelder'' as surname
* Hölder condition
* Hölder's inequality
In mathematical analysis, Hölder's inequality, named after Otto Hölder, is a fundamental inequality (mathematics), inequality between Lebesgue integration, in ...
with an explicit estimate:
:
where
:
For any ''p'' > 2 sufficiently close to 2, ''C''
''p''''k'' <1. Hence the Neumann series for (''I'' − ''A'')
−1 and (''I'' − ''B'')
−1 converge. The Hölder estimates for ''P'' yield the following uniform estimates for the normalized solution of the Beltrami equation:
:
If ''μ'' is supported in , ''z'', ≤ ''R'', then
:
Setting ''w''
1 = ''z'' and ''w''
2 = 0, it follows that for , ''z'', ≤ ''R''
:
where the constant ''C'' > 0 depends only on the L
∞ norm of ''μ''. So the Beltrami coefficient of ''f''
−1 is smooth and supported in
''z'', ≤ ''CR''. It has the same L
∞ norm as that of ''f''. So the inverse diffeomorphisms also satisfy uniform Hölder estimates.
Solution for measurable Beltrami coefficients
Existence
The theory of the Beltrami equation can be extended to measurable Beltrami coefficients ''μ''. For simplicity only a special class of ''μ'' will be considered—adequate for most applications—namely those functions which are smooth an open set Ω (the regular set) with complement Λ a closed set of measure zero (the singular set). Thus Λ is a closed set that is contained in open sets of arbitrarily small area. For measurable Beltrami coefficients ''μ'' with compact support in , ''z'', < ''R'', the solution of the Beltrami equation can be obtained as a limit of solutions for smooth Beltrami coefficients.
In fact in this case the singular set Λ is compact. Take smooth functions φ
''n'' of compact support with 0 ≤ φ
''n'' ≤ 1, equal to 1 on a neighborhood of Λ and 0 off a slightly larger neighbourhood, shrinking to Λ as ''n'' increases. Set
:
The ''μ''
''n'' are smooth with compact support in , ''z'', < ''R'' and
:
The ''μ''
''n'' tend to ''μ'' in any ''L''
''p'' norm with ''p'' < ∞.
The corresponding normalised solutions ''f''
''n'' of the Beltrami equations and their inverses ''g''
''n'' satisfy uniform Hölder estimates. They are therefore
equicontinuous on any compact subset of C; they are even holomorphic for , ''z'', > ''R''. So by the
Arzelà–Ascoli theorem
The Arzelà–Ascoli theorem is a fundamental result of mathematical analysis giving necessary and sufficient conditions to decide whether every sequence of a given family of real-valued continuous functions defined on a closed and bounded inte ...
, passing to a subsequence if necessary, it can be assumed that both ''f''
''n'' and ''g''
''n'' converge uniformly on compacta to ''f'' and ''g''. The limits will satisfy the same Hölder estimates and be holomorphic for , ''z'', > ''R''. The relations ''f''
''n''''g''
''n'' = id = ''g''
''n''''f''
''n'' imply that in the limit ''f''
''g'' = id = ''g''
''f'', so that ''f'' and ''g'' are homeomorphisms.
*The limits ''f'' and ''g'' are weakly differentiable. In fact let
::
:These lie in L
p and are uniformly bounded:
::
:Passing to a subsequence if necessary, it can be assumed that the sequences have weak limits ''u'' and ''v'' in L
p. These are the distributional derivatives of ''f''(''z'') – ''z'', since if ψ is smooth of compact support
::
:and similarly for ''v''. A similar argument applies for the ''g'' using the fact that Beltrami coefficients of the ''g''
''n'' are supported in a fixed closed disk.
*''f'' satisfies the Beltrami equation with Beltrami coefficient ''μ''. In fact the relation ''u'' = ''μ'' ⋅ ''v'' + ''μ'' follows by continuity from the relation ''u''
''n'' = ''μ''
''n'' ⋅ ''v''
''n'' + ''μ''
''n''. It suffices to show that ''μ''
''n'' ⋅ ''v''
''n'' tends weakly to ''μ'' ⋅ ''v''. The difference can be written
::
:The first term tends weakly to 0, while the second term equals ''μ φ''
''n'' ''v''
''n''. The terms are uniformly bounded in ''L''
p, so to check weak convergence to 0 it enough to check inner products with a dense subset of ''L''
2. The inner products with functions of compact support in Ω are zero for ''n'' sufficiently large.
*''f'' carries closed sets of measure zero onto closed sets of measure zero. It suffices to check this for a compact set ''K'' of measure zero. If ''U'' is a bounded open set containing ''K'' and ''J'' denotes the Jacobian of a function, then
::
:Thus if ''A''(''U'') is small, so is ''A''(''f''
''n''(''U'')). On the other hand ''f''
''n''(''U'') eventually contains ''f''(''K''), for applying the inverse ''g''
''n'', ''U'' eventually contains ''g''
''n'' ''f'' (''K'') since ''g''
''n'' ''f'' tends uniformly to the identity on compacta. Hence ''f''(''K'') has measure zero.
* ''f'' is smooth on the regular set Ω of ''μ''. This follows from the elliptic regularity results in the ''L''
2 theory.
* ''f'' has non-vanishing Jacobian there. In particular ''f''
''z'' ≠ 0 on Ω. In fact for ''z''
0 in Ω, if ''n'' is large enough
::
:near ''z''
1 = ''f''
''n''(''z''
0). So ''h'' = ''f''
''g''
''n'' is holomorphic near ''z''
1. Since it is locally a homeomorphism, ''h'' ' (''z''
1) ≠ 0. Since ''f'' =''h''
''f''
''n''. it follows that the Jacobian of ''f'' is non-zero at ''z''
0. On the other hand ''J''(''f'') = , ''f''
''z'',
2 (1 − , μ,
2), so ''f''
''z'' ≠ 0 at ''z''
0.
* ''g'' satisfies the Beltrami equation with Beltrami coefficient
::
:or equivalently
::
:on the regular set Ω ' = ''f''(Ω), with corresponding singular set Λ ' = ''f''(Λ).
*''g'' satisfies the Beltrami equation for ''μ''′. In fact ''g'' has weak distributional derivatives in 1 + L
''p'' and L
''p''. Pairing with smooth functions of compact support in Ω, these derivatives coincide with the actual derivatives at points of Ω. Since Λ has measure zero, the distributional derivatives equal the actual derivatives in ''L''
''p''. Thus ''g'' satisfies Beltrami's equation since the actual derivatives do.
*If ''f''* and ''f'' are solutions constructed as above for ''μ''* and ''μ'' then ''f''*
''f''
−1 satisfies the Beltrami equation for
::
:defined on Ω ∩ Ω*. The weak derivatives of ''f''*
''f''
−1 are given by the actual derivatives on Ω ∩ Ω*. In fact this follows by approximating ''f''* and ''g'' = ''f''
−1 by ''f''*
''n'' and ''g''
''n''. The derivatives are uniformly bounded in 1 + L
''p'' and L
''p'', so as before weak limits give the distributional derivatives of ''f''*
''f''
−1. Pairing with smooth functions of compact support in Ω ∩ Ω*, these agree with the usual derivatives. So the distributional derivatives are given by the usual derivatives off Λ ∪ Λ*, a set of measure zero.
This establishes the existence of homeomorphic solutions of Beltrami's equation in the case of Beltrami coefficients of compact support. It also shows that the inverse homeomorphisms and composed homeomorphisms satisfy Beltrami equations and that all computations can be performed by restricting to regular sets.
If the support is not compact the same trick used in the smooth case can be used to construct a solution in terms of two homeomorphisms associated to compactly supported Beltrami coefficients. Note that, because of the assumptions on the Beltrami coefficient, a Möbius transformation of the extended complex plane can be applied to make the singular set of the Beltrami coefficient compact. In that case one of the homeomorphisms can be chosen to be a diffeomorphism.
Uniqueness
There are several proofs of the uniqueness of solutions of the Beltrami equation with a given Beltrami coefficient. Since applying a Möbius transformation of the complex plane to any solution gives another solution, solutions can be normalised so that they fix 0, 1 and ∞. The method of solution of the Beltrami equation using the Beurling transform also provides a proof of uniqueness for coefficients of compact support ''μ'' and for which the distributional derivatives are in 1 + L
''p'' and L
''p''. The relations
:
for smooth functions ψ of compact support are also valid in the distributional sense for L
''p'' functions ''h'' since they can be written as L
''p'' of ψ
''n'''s. If ''f'' is a solution of the Beltrami equation with ''f''(0) = 0 and ''f''
''z'' - 1 in L
''p'' then
:
satisfies
:
So ''F'' is weakly holomorphic. Applying Weyl's lemma it is possible to conclude that there exists a holomorphic function ''G'' that is equal to ''F'' almost everywhere. Abusing notation redefine ''F:=G''. The conditions ''F'' '(z) − 1 lies in L
''p'' and ''F''(0) = 0 force ''F''(''z'') = ''z''. Hence
:
and so differentiating
:
If ''g'' is another solution then
:
Since ''T''μ has operator norm on L
''p'' less than 1, this forces
:
But then from the Beltrami equation
:
Hence ''f'' − ''g'' is both holomorphic and antiholomorphic, so a constant. Since ''f''(0) = 0 = ''g''(0), it follows that ''f'' = ''g''. Note that since ''f'' is holomorphic off the support of ''μ'' and ''f''(∞) = ∞, the conditions that the derivatives are locally in L
''p'' force
:
For a general ''f'' satisfying Beltrami's equation and with distributional derivatives locally in L
''p'', it can be assumed after applying a Möbius transformation that 0 is not in the singular set of the Beltrami coefficient ''μ''. If ''g'' is a smooth diffeomorphism ''g'' with Beltrami coefficient λ supported near 0, the Beltrami coefficient ''ν'' for ''f''
''g''
−1 can be calculated directly using the change of variables formula for distributional derivatives:
:
''λ'' can be chosen so that ν vanishes near zero. Applying the map ''z''
−1 results in a solution of Beltrami's equation with a Beltrami coefficient of compact support. The directional derivatives are still locally in L
''p''. The coefficient ν depends only on ''μ'', ''λ'' and ''g'', so any two solutions of the original equation will produce solutions near 0 with distributional derivatives locally in ''L''
''p'' and the same Beltrami coefficient. They are therefore equal. Hence the solutions of the original equation are equal.
Uniformization of multiply connected planar domains
The method used to prove the smooth Riemann mapping theorem can be generalized to multiply connected planar regions with smooth boundary. The Beltrami coefficient in these cases is smooth on an open set, the complement of which has measure zero. The theory of the Beltrami equation with measurable coefficients is therefore required.
Doubly connected domains. If Ω is a doubly connected planar region, then there is a diffeomorphism ''F'' of an annulus ''r'' ≤ , z, ≤ 1 onto the closure of Ω, such that after a conformal change the induced metric on the annulus can be continued smoothly by reflection in both boundaries. The annulus is a fundamental domain for the group generated by the two reflections, which reverse orientation. The images of the fundamental domain under the group fill out C with 0 removed and the Beltrami coefficient is smooth there. The canonical solution ''h'' of the Beltrami equation on C, by the L
''p'' theory is a homeomorphism. It is smooth on away from 0 by elliptic regularity. By uniqueness it preserves the unit circle, together with its interior and exterior. Uniqueness of the solution also implies that reflection there is a conjugate Möbius transformation ''g'' such that ''h''
''R'' = ''g''
''h'' where ''R'' denotes reflection in , ''z'', = ''r''. Composing with a Möbius transformation that fixes the unit circle it can be assumed that ''g'' is a reflection in a circle , ''z'', = ''s'' with ''s'' < 1. It follows that ''F''
''h''
−1 is a smooth diffeomorphism of the annulus ''s'' ≤ , ''z'', ≤ 1 onto the closure of Ω, holomorphic in the interior.
Multiply connected domains. For regions with a higher degree of connectivity ''k'' + 1, the result is essentially
Bers' generalization of the retrosection theorem.
There is a smooth diffeomorphism ''F'' of the region Ω
1, given by the unit disk with ''k'' open disks removed, onto the closure of Ω. It can be assumed that 0 lies in the interior of the domain. Again after a modification of the diffeomorphism and conformal change near the boundary, the metric can be assumed to be compatible with reflection. Let ''G'' be the group generated by reflections in the boundary circles of Ω
1. The interior of Ω
1 iz a fundamental domain for ''G''. Moreover, the index two normal subgroup ''G''
0 consisting of orientation-preserving mappings is a classical
Schottky group
In mathematics, a Schottky group is a special sort of Kleinian group, first studied by .
Definition
Fix some point ''p'' on the Riemann sphere. Each Jordan curve not passing through ''p'' divides the Riemann sphere into two pieces, and we call ...
. Its fundamental domain consists of the original fundamental domain with its reflection in the unit circle added. If the reflection is ''R''
0, it is a
free group
In mathematics, the free group ''F'S'' over a given set ''S'' consists of all words that can be built from members of ''S'', considering two words to be different unless their equality follows from the group axioms (e.g. ''st'' = ''suu''− ...
with generators ''R''
''i''''R''
0 where ''R''
''i'' are the reflections in the interior circles in the original domain. The images of the original domain by the ''G'', or equivalently the reflected domain by the Schottky group, fill out the regular set for the Schottky group. It acts properly discontinuously there. The complement is the
limit set
In mathematics, especially in the study of dynamical systems, a limit set is the state a dynamical system reaches after an infinite amount of time has passed, by either going forward or backwards in time. Limit sets are important because they c ...
of ''G''
0. It has measure zero. The induced metric on Ω
1 extends by reflection to the regular set. The corresponding Beltrami coefficient is invariant for the reflection group generated by the reflections ''R''
''i'' for ''i'' ≥ 0. Since the limit set has measure zero, the Beltrami coefficient extends uniquely to a bounded measurable function on C. smooth on the regular set. The normalised solution of the Beltrami equation ''h'' is a smooth diffeomorphism of the closure of Ω
1 onto itself preserving the unit circle, its exterior and interior. Necessarily ''h''
''R''
''i'' = ''S''
''i'' ''h''. where ''S''
''i'' is the reflection in another circle in the unit disk. Looking at fixed points, the circles arising this way for different ''i'' must be disjoint. It follows that ''F''
''h''
−1 defines a smooth diffeomorphism of the unit disc with the interior of these circles removed onto the closure of Ω, which is holomorphic in the interior.
Simultaneous uniformization
showed that two compact Riemannian 2-manifolds ''M''
1, ''M''
2 of genus ''g'' > 1 can be simultaneously uniformized.
As topological spaces ''M''
1 and ''M''
2 are homeomorphic to a fixed quotient of the upper half plane H by a discrete cocompact subgroup Γ of PSL(2,R). Γ can be identified with the
fundamental group
In the mathematics, mathematical field of algebraic topology, the fundamental group of a topological space is the group (mathematics), group of the equivalence classes under homotopy of the Loop (topology), loops contained in the space. It record ...
of the manifolds and H is a
universal covering space
In topology, a covering or covering projection is a map between topological spaces that, intuitively, locally acts like a projection of multiple copies of a space onto itself. In particular, coverings are special types of local homeomorphisms. I ...
. The homeomorphisms can be chosen to be piecewise linear on corresponding triangulations. A result of implies that the homeomorphisms can be adjusted near the edges and the vertices of the triangulation to produce diffeomorphisms. The metric on ''M''
1 induces a metric on H which is Γ-invariant. Let ''μ'' be the corresponding Beltrami coefficient on H. It can be extended to C by reflection
:
It satisfies the invariance property
:
for ''g'' in Γ. The solution ''f'' of the corresponding Beltrami equation defines a homeomorphism of C, preserving the real axis and the upper and lower half planes. Conjugation of the group elements by ''f''
−1 gives a new cocompact subgroup Γ
1 of PSL(2,R). Composing the original diffeomorphism with the inverse of ''f'' then yield zero as the Beltrami coefficient. Thus the metric induced on H is invariant under Γ
1 and conformal to the
Poincaré metric
In mathematics, the Poincaré metric, named after Henri Poincaré, is the metric tensor describing a two-dimensional surface of constant negative curvature. It is the natural metric commonly used in a variety of calculations in hyperbolic geometry ...
on H. It must therefore be given by multiplying by a positive smooth function that is Γ
1-invariant. Any such function corresponds to a smooth function on ''M''
1. Dividing the metric on ''M''
1 by this function results in a conformally equivalent metric on ''M''
1 which agrees with the Poincaré metric on H / Γ
1. In this way ''M''
1 becomes a
compact Riemann surface, i.e. is uniformized and inherits a natural complex structure.
With this conformal change in metric ''M''
1 can be identified with H / Γ
1. The diffeomorphism between onto ''M''
2 induces another metric on H which is invariant under Γ
1. It defines a Beltrami coefficient λ
omn H which this time is extended to C by defining λ to be 0 off H. The solution ''h'' of the Beltrami equation is a homeomorphism of C which is holomorphic on the lower half plane and smooth on the upper half plane. The image of the real axis is a
Jordan curve
In mathematics, a curve (also called a curved line in older texts) is an object similar to a line, but that does not have to be straight.
Intuitively, a curve may be thought of as the trace left by a moving point. This is the definition that ...
dividing C into two components. Conjugation of Γ
1 by ''h''
−1 gives a
quasi-Fuchsian subgroup Γ
2 of PSL(2,C). It leaves invariant the Jordan curve and acts properly discontinuously on each of the two components. The quotients of the two components by Γ
2 are naturally identified with ''M''
1 and ''M''
2. This identification is compatible with the natural complex structures on both ''M''
1 and ''M''
2.
Conformal welding
An orientation-preserving homeomorphism ''f'' of the circle is said to be
quasisymmetric if there are positive constants ''a'' and ''b'' such that
:
If
:
then the condition becomes
:
Conversely if this condition is satisfied for all such triples of points, then ''f'' is quasisymmetric.
An apparently weaker condition on a homeomorphism ''f'' of the circle is that it be ''quasi-Möbius'', that is there are constants ''c'', ''d'' > 0 such that
:
where
:
denotes the
cross-ratio
In geometry, the cross-ratio, also called the double ratio and anharmonic ratio, is a number associated with a list of four collinear points, particularly points on a projective line. Given four points , , , on a line, their cross ratio is defin ...
. In fact if ''f'' is quasisymmetric then it is also quasi-Möbius, with ''c'' = ''a''
2 and ''d'' = ''b'': this follows by multiplying the first inequality above for (''z''
1,''z''
3,''z''
4) and (''z''
2,''z''
4,''z''
3).
Conversely if ''f'' is a quasi-Möbius homeomorphism then it is also quasisymmetric.
Indeed, it is immediate that if ''f'' is quasi-Möbius so is its inverse. It then follows that ''f'' (and hence ''f''
−1) is
Hölder continuous Hölder:
* ''Hölder, Hoelder'' as surname
* Hölder condition
* Hölder's inequality
In mathematical analysis, Hölder's inequality, named after Otto Hölder, is a fundamental inequality (mathematics), inequality between Lebesgue integration, in ...
. To see this let ''S'' be the set of cube roots of unity, so that if ''a'' ≠ ''b'' in ''S'', then , ''a'' − ''b'', = 2 sin /3 = . To prove a Hölder estimate, it can be assumed that ''x'' – ''y'' is uniformly small. Then both ''x'' and ''y'' are greater than a fixed distance away from ''a'', ''b'' in ''S'' with ''a'' ≠ ''b'', so the estimate follows by applying the quasi-Möbius inequality to ''x'', ''a'', ''y'', ''b''. To check that ''f'' is quasisymmetric, it suffices to find a uniform upper bound for , ''f''(''x'') − ''f''(''y''), / , ''f''(''x'') − ''f''(''z''), in the case of a triple with , ''x'' − ''z'', = , ''x'' − ''y'', , uniformly small. In this case there is a point ''w'' at a distance greater than 1 from ''x'', ''y'' and ''z''. Applying the quasi-Möbius inequality to ''x'', ''w'', ''y'' and ''z'' yields the required upper bound.
A homeomorphism ''f'' of the unit circle can be extended to a homeomorphism ''F'' of the closed unit disk which is diffeomorphism on its interior. , generalizing earlier results of Ahlfors and Beurling, produced such
an extension with the additional properties that it commutes with the action of SU(1,1) by Möbius transformations and is quasiconformal if ''f'' is quasisymmetric. (A less elementary method was also found independently by : Tukia's approach has the advantage of also applying in higher dimensions.) When ''f'' is a diffeomorphism of the circle, the
Alexander extension provides another way of extending ''f'':
:
where ψ is a smooth function with values in
,1 equal to 0 near 0 and 1 near 1, and
:
with ''g''(''θ'' + 2) = ''g''(''θ'') + 2. give a survey of various methods of extension, including variants of the Ahlfors-Beurling extension which are smooth or analytic in the open unit disk.
In the case of a diffeomorphism, the Alexander extension ''F'' can be continued to any larger disk , ''z'', < ''R'' with ''R'' > 1. Accordingly, in the unit disc
:
This is also true for the other extensions when ''f'' is only quasisymmetric.
Now extend ''μ'' to a Beltrami coefficient on the whole of C by setting it equal to 0 for , ''z'', ≥ 1. Let ''G'' be the corresponding solution of the Beltrami equation. Let ''F''
1(''z'') = ''G''
''F''
−1(''z'') for , ''z'', ≤ 1 and
''F''
2(''z'') = ''G'' (''z'') for , ''z'', ≥ 1. Thus ''F''
1 and ''F''
2 are univalent holomorphic maps of , ''z'', < 1 and , ''z'', > 1 onto the inside and outside of a Jordan curve. They extend continuously to homeomorphisms ''f''
''i'' of the unit circle onto the Jordan curve on the boundary. By construction they satisfy the
conformal welding condition:
:
See also
*
Quasiconformal mapping
*
Measurable Riemann mapping theorem
*
Isothermal coordinates In mathematics, specifically in differential geometry, isothermal coordinates on a Riemannian manifold are local coordinates where the metric is conformal to the Euclidean metric. This means that in isothermal coordinates, the Riemannian metric ...
Notes
References
*
*
*
* English translation in
*
*, Chapter VI.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
* Papadopoulos, Athanase, ed. (2007), Handbook of Teichmüller theory. Vol. I, IRMA Lectures in Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, 11, European Mathematical Society (EMS), Zürich, , ,
* Papadopoulos, Athanase, ed. (2009), Handbook of Teichmüller theory. Vol. II, IRMA Lectures in Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, 13, European Mathematical Society (EMS), Zürich, , ,
* Papadopoulos, Athanase, ed. (2012), Handbook of Teichmüller theory. Vol. III, IRMA Lectures in Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, 19, European Mathematical Society (EMS), Zürich, ,
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
{{Authority control
Partial differential equations
Complex analysis
Operator theory
Moduli theory