to the interior of the polygon. The function f maps the real axis to the edges of the polygon. If the polygon has interior angles, then this mapping is given by
where is a constant, and are the values, along the real axis of the plane, of points corresponding to the vertices of the polygon in the plane. A transformation of this form is called a Schwarz–Christoffel mapping.
The integral can be simplified by mapping the point at infinity of the plane to one of the vertices of the plane polygon. By doing this, the first factor in the formula becomes constant and so can be absorbed into the constant . Conventionally, the point at infinity would be mapped to the vertex with angle .
In practice, to find a mapping to a specific polygon one needs to find the values which generate the correct polygon side lengths. This requires solving a set of nonlinear equations, and in most cases can only be done numerically.[1]
Example
Consider a semi-infinite strip in the zplane. This may be regarded as a limiting form of a triangle with vertices P = 0, Q = π i, and R (with R real), as R tends to infinity. Now α = 0 and β = γ = π⁄2 in the limit. Suppose we are looking for the mapping f with f(−1) = Q, f(1) = P, and f(∞) = R. Then f is given by
Evaluation of this integral yields
where C is a (complex) constant of integration. Requiring that f(−1) = Q and f(1) = P gives C = 0 and K = 1. Hence the Schwarz–Christoffel mapping is given by
This transformation is sketched below.
Other simple mappings
Triangle
A mapping to a plane triangle with interior angles and is given by
An analogue of SC mapping that works also for multiply-connected is presented in: Case, James (2008), "Breakthrough in Conformal Mapping"(PDF), SIAM News, 41 (1).