Geometric function theory
Encyclopedia
Geometric function theory is the study of geometric
Geometry
Geometry arose as the field of knowledge dealing with spatial relationships. Geometry was one of the two fields of pre-modern mathematics, the other being the study of numbers ....

 properties of analytic function
Analytic function
In mathematics, an analytic function is a function that is locally given by a convergent power series. There exist both real analytic functions and complex analytic functions, categories that are similar in some ways, but different in others...

s. A fundamental result in the theory is the Riemann mapping theorem.

Riemann mapping theorem

Let z be a point in a simply-connected region D (D≠ ℂ) and D having at least two boundary points. Then there exists a unique analytic function w = f(z) mapping D bijectively into the open unit disk |w|<1 such that f(z)=0 and
f ′(z)>0.

It should be noted that while Riemann's mapping theorem demonstrates the existence of a mapping function, it does not actually exhibit this function.

Elaboration

In the above figure, consider D and D as two simply connected regions different from ℂ. The Riemann mapping theorem provides the existence of w=f(z) mapping D onto the unit disk and existence of w=g(z) mapping D onto the unit disk. Thus gf is a one-one mapping of D onto D.
If we can show that g, and consequently the composition, is analytic, we then have a conformal mapping of D onto D, proving "any two simply connected regions different from the whole plane ℂ can be mapped conformally onto each other."

Univalent function

We know that a complex function is a multiple valued function. That is, for distinct points z, z,... in a domain D, they may share a common value, f(z)=f(z)=... But if we restrict a complex function to be injective( one-one ), then we obtain a class of functions, viz, univalent functions. A function f analytic in a domain D is said to be univalent there if it does not take the same value twice for all pairs of distinct points z and z in D, i.e f(z)f(z) implies zz. Alternate terms in common use are schilicht and simple. It is a remarkable fact, fundamental to the theory of univalent functions, that univalence is essentially preserved under uniform convergence.
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