[Math] Conformal mapping into the unit disc

complex-analysis

Is there a bijective conformal mapping from $A=\mathbb{C}-[1,\infty[$ into the unit open disc?

I thought that I could translate A into $\mathbb{C}-[0,\infty[$ then consider $f(z)=z^{1/2}$ which should be defined since i cut a semiline. Now I should obtain the upper half-space and mao this into the unit disc. Is this correct? What about the same question from $B=\mathbb{C}-[0,1]$? In this case it coudn't be bijective since B is not simply connected right? But what could be a conformal map ?

Best Answer

For the first question, your idea is correct. As for the second, since $D=\mathbb{C}\setminus[0,1]$ is doubly connected, it is conformaly equivalent to an annulus. To find a conformal mapping from $D$ to an annulus, consider the function $z+1/z$ on $\{0<|z|<1\}$ (or its inverse).