In complex analysis, the Schwarz triangle function or Schwarz s-function is a function that conformally maps the upper half plane to a triangle in the upper half plane having lines or circular arcs for edges. The target triangle is not necessarily a Schwarz triangle, although that is the most mathematically interesting case. When that triangle is a non-overlapping Schwarz triangle, i.e. a Möbius triangle, the inverse of the Schwarz triangle function is a single-valuedautomorphic function for that triangle's triangle group. More specifically, it is a modular function.
Formula
Let πα, πβ, and πγ be the interior angles at the vertices of the triangle in radians. Each of α, β, and γ may take values between 0 and 1 inclusive. Following Nehari,[1] these angles are in clockwise order, with the vertex having angle πα at the origin and the vertex having angle πγ lying on the real line. The Schwarz triangle function can be given in terms of hypergeometric functions as:
where
a = (1−α−β−γ)/2,
b = (1−α+β−γ)/2,
c = 1−α,
a′ = a − c + 1 = (1+α−β−γ)/2,
b′ = b − c + 1 = (1+α+β−γ)/2, and
c′ = 2 − c = 1 + α.
This function maps the upper half-plane to a spherical triangle if α + β + γ > 1, or a hyperbolic triangle if α + β + γ < 1. When α + β + γ = 1, then the triangle is a Euclidean triangle with straight edges: a = 0, , and the formula reduces to that given by the Schwarz–Christoffel transformation.
This mapping has regular singular points at z = 0, 1, and ∞, corresponding to the vertices of the triangle with angles πα, πγ, and πβ respectively. At these singular points,[3]
When α, β, and γ are rational, the triangle is a Schwarz triangle. When each of α, β, and γ are either the reciprocal of an integer or zero, the triangle is a Möbius triangle, i.e. a non-overlapping Schwarz triangle. For a Möbius triangle, the inverse is a modular function.
When α = 0 the triangle is degenerate, lying entirely on the real line. If either of β or γ are non-zero, the angles can be permuted so that the positive value is α, but that is not an option for an ideal triangle having all angles zero.
The methodology used to derive the Schwarz triangle function earlier can be applied more generally to arc-edged polygons. However, for an n-sided polygon, the solution has n-3 additional parameters, which are difficult to determine in practice.[6] See Schwarzian derivative § Conformal mapping of circular arc polygons for more details.
Ahlfors, Lars V. (1979). Complex analysis: an introduction to the theory of analytic functions of one complex variable (3 ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN0-07-000657-1. OCLC4036464.
Sansone, Giovanni; Gerretsen, Johan (1969). Lectures on the theory of functions of a complex variable. II: Geometric theory. Wolters-Noordhoff. OCLC245996162.