[Math] Stereographic projection (Theorem that circles on the sphere get mapped to circles on the plane)

geometrystereographic-projections

I'm trying to understand the proof of the theorem (given in the link) that states
"Stereographic projection maps circles of the unit sphere, which do not contain the north pole, to circles in the complex plane."

Link to the proof

In the proof it states "In order to obtain an
equation for the projection points (x, y) ∈ C of the circle c under stereographic projection, we substitute (1) into Equation (2), which yields"

Why does plugging in the pre image of points from the image plane into an arbitrary plane give me an equation of the points under stereographic projection? What is the significance of using the pre image?

This is an idea for your use:

enter image description here

Best Answer

Remember, all transformations have two interpretations, a passive and and active one.

He's looking to express the equation for the plane, which is given in coordinates of $\Sigma$ (that is, $x,\,y,\,h$), in terms of coordinates of the complex $2d$ plane (that is, $x,y$).

Right before he states that $R(x,y)$ is precisely the function that does such a thing, namely, expressing a point from $\Sigma$ in terms of $x,y$.

In doing so, the equation of the plane, which involves $x,y,h$ becomes an equation for just the two coordinates of the plane $x,y$. This allows him to check what kind of geometric object we have within $\mathbb{C}$.

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