[Math] Find the Möbius transform that maps two given circles to concentric circles

complex-analysisconformal-geometrymobius-transformation

I'm trying to find the Möbius transform that maps the circles in the image below ($|z| = 6$, and $|z- 4.5i| = 1.5$) to concentric circles. Comparing with a similar problem where the circles lie on the real axis, I came up with:

$$w = z/(z-6i)$$

Is this correct? If so, why? If not, why not?

Circles Image

Best Answer

Since these two circles touch each other, there is no Möbius transformation that takes them to two circles that don't touch each other. Otherwise what you suggest could be done.

If $w = \dfrac{z}{z-6i}$ then $w=\infty$ when $z=6i$, since you get $0$ in the denominator and something else in the numerator. If a Möbius transformation maps one point on a circle to $\infty$, then it maps the circle to a straight line. Since that point is on both circles, they both get transformed to straight lines. The two circles don't meet except at $6i$; therefore the two lines don't meet except at $\infty$, so they are parallel. If you find the images of two points on each circle other than the point that gets mapped to $\infty$, then you'll know exactly which two straight lines they are.

Some people draw a distinction between the meanings of the terms "Möbius transformation" and "Möbius transform". What we're talking about above are "Möbius transformations" or "linear fractional transformations". The Möbius transform, on the other hand, transforms one function of a positive integer to another via the Möbius $\mu$ function.