In mathematics, the conformal group of an inner product space is the group of transformations from the space to itself that preserve angles. More formally, it is the group of transformations that preserve the conformal geometry of the space.
Several specific conformal groups are particularly important:
Q(Tx)=λ2Q(x)
For a definite quadratic form, the conformal orthogonal group is equal to the orthogonal group times the group of dilations.
All conformal groups are Lie groups.
In Euclidean geometry one can expect the standard circular angle to be characteristic, but in pseudo-Euclidean space there is also the hyperbolic angle. In the study of special relativity the various frames of reference, for varying velocity with respect to a rest frame, are related by rapidity, a hyperbolic angle. One way to describe a Lorentz boost is as a hyperbolic rotation which preserves the differential angle between rapidities. Thus, they are conformal transformations with respect to the hyperbolic angle.
A method to generate an appropriate conformal group is to mimic the steps of the Möbius group as the conformal group of the ordinary complex plane. Pseudo-Euclidean geometry is supported by alternative complex planes where points are split-complex numbers or dual numbers. Just as the Möbius group requires the Riemann sphere, a compact space, for a complete description, so the alternative complex planes require compactification for complete description of conformal mapping. Nevertheless, the conformal group in each case is given by linear fractional transformations on the appropriate plane.[2]
M
[g]
Conf(M)
M
More concretely, this is the group of angle-preserving smooth maps from
M
[g]
For Pseudo-Euclidean space, the definition is slightly different.[3]
Conf(p,q)
Ep,
Rp,q
Sp x Sq
Rp+1,
(x,t)\mapstoX=(x,t)
X
Sp x Sq
Rp+1,q+1
Np,q
Conf(p,q):=Conf(Np,q)
Rp,q
Rp,q
For Pseudo-Euclidean space
Rp,q
\{M\mu\nu,P\mu,K\mu,D\}
η\mu\nu
In fact, this Lie algebra is isomorphic to the Lie algebra of the Lorentz group with one more space and one more time dimension, that is,
ak{conf}(p,q)\congak{so}(p+1,q+1)
Jab
a,b=-1,0, … ,n=p+q
\tildeηab=\operatorname{diag}(-1,+1,-1, … ,-1,+1, … ,+1)
For two-dimensional Euclidean space or one-plus-one dimensional spacetime, the space of conformal symmetries is much larger. In physics it is sometimes said the conformal group is infinite-dimensional, but this is not quite correct as while the Lie algebra of local symmetries is infinite dimensional, these do not necessarily extend to a Lie group of well-defined global symmetries.
For spacetime dimension
n>2
n=2
z=x+iy
In 1908, Harry Bateman and Ebenezer Cunningham, two young researchers at University of Liverpool, broached the idea of a conformal group of spacetime[5] [6] [7] They argued that the kinematics groups are perforce conformal as they preserve the quadratic form of spacetime and are akin to orthogonal transformations, though with respect to an isotropic quadratic form. The liberties of an electromagnetic field are not confined to kinematic motions, but rather are required only to be locally proportional to a transformation preserving the quadratic form. Harry Bateman's paper in 1910 studied the Jacobian matrix of a transformation that preserves the light cone and showed it had the conformal property (proportional to a form preserver).[8] Bateman and Cunningham showed that this conformal group is "the largest group of transformations leaving Maxwell’s equations structurally invariant."[9] The conformal group of spacetime has been denoted [10]
Isaak Yaglom has contributed to the mathematics of spacetime conformal transformations in split-complex and dual numbers.[11] Since split-complex numbers and dual numbers form rings, not fields, the linear fractional transformations require a projective line over a ring to be bijective mappings.
It has been traditional since the work of Ludwik Silberstein in 1914 to use the ring of biquaternions to represent the Lorentz group. For the spacetime conformal group, it is sufficient to consider linear fractional transformations on the projective line over that ring. Elements of the spacetime conformal group were called spherical wave transformations by Bateman. The particulars of the spacetime quadratic form study have been absorbed into Lie sphere geometry.
Commenting on the continued interest shown in physical science, A. O. Barut wrote in 1985, "One of the prime reasons for the interest in the conformal group is that it is perhaps the most important of the larger groups containing the Poincaré group."[12]