The first stereographic projection defined in the preceding section sends the "south pole" (0, 0, −1) of the
unit sphere to (0, 0), the equator to the
unit circle, the southern hemisphere to the region inside the circle, and the northern hemisphere to the region outside the circle. The projection is not defined at the projection point = (0, 0, 1). Small neighborhoods of this point are sent to subsets of the plane far away from (0, 0). The closer is to (0, 0, 1), the more distant its image is from (0, 0) in the plane. For this reason it is common to speak of (0, 0, 1) as mapping to "infinity" in the plane, and of the sphere as completing the plane by adding a
point at infinity. This notion finds utility in
projective geometry and complex analysis. On a merely
topological level, it illustrates how the sphere is
homeomorphic to the
one-point compactification of the plane. In
Cartesian coordinates a point on the sphere and its image on the plane either both are
rational points or none of them: : P \in \mathbb Q^3 \iff P' \in \mathbb Q^2 Stereographic projection is conformal, meaning that it preserves the angles at which curves cross each other (see figures). On the other hand, stereographic projection does not preserve area; in general, the area of a region of the sphere does not equal the area of its projection onto the plane. The area element is given in coordinates by :dA = \frac{4}{(1 + X^2 + Y^2)^2} \; dX \; dY. Along the unit circle, where , there is no inflation of area in the limit, giving a scale factor of 1. Near (0, 0) areas are inflated by a factor of 4, and near infinity areas are inflated by arbitrarily small factors. The metric is given in coordinates by : \frac{4}{(1 + X^2 + Y^2)^2} \; ( dX^2 + dY^2), and is the unique formula found in
Bernhard Riemann's
Habilitationsschrift on the foundations of geometry, delivered at Göttingen in 1854, and entitled
Über die Hypothesen welche der Geometrie zu Grunde liegen. No map from the sphere to the plane can be both conformal and area-preserving. If it were, then it would be a local
isometry and would preserve
Gaussian curvature. The sphere and the plane have different Gaussian curvatures, so this is impossible.
Circles on the sphere that do
not pass through the point of projection are projected to circles on the plane. Circles on the sphere that
do pass through the point of projection are projected to straight lines on the plane. These lines are sometimes thought of as circles through the point at infinity, or circles of infinite radius. These properties can be verified by using the expressions of x,y,z in terms of X, Y, Z, given in : using these expressions for a substitution in the equation ax+by+cz-d=0 of the plane containing a circle on the sphere, and clearing denominators, one gets the equation of a circle, that is, a second-degree equation with (c-d)(X^2+Y^2) as its quadratic part. The equation becomes linear if c=d, that is, if the plane passes through the point of projection. All lines in the plane, when transformed to circles on the sphere by the inverse of stereographic projection, meet at the projection point. Parallel lines, which do not intersect in the plane, are transformed to circles tangent at projection point. Intersecting lines are transformed to circles that intersect
transversally at two points in the sphere, one of which is the projection point. (Similar remarks hold about the
real projective plane, but the intersection relationships are different there.) s shown in distinct colors The
loxodromes of the sphere map to curves on the plane of the form :R = e^{\Theta/a},\, where the parameter measures the "tightness" of the loxodrome. Thus loxodromes correspond to
logarithmic spirals. These spirals intersect radial lines in the plane at equal angles, just as the loxodromes intersect meridians on the sphere at equal angles. The stereographic projection relates to the plane inversion in a simple way. Let and be two points on the sphere with projections and on the plane. Then and are inversive images of each other in the image of the equatorial circle if and only if and are reflections of each other in the equatorial plane. In other words, if: • is a point on the sphere, but not a 'north pole' and not its
antipode, the 'south pole' , • is the image of in a stereographic projection with the projection point and • is the image of in a stereographic projection with the projection point , then and are inversive images of each other in the unit circle. : \triangle NOP^\prime \sim \triangle P^{\prime\prime}OS \implies OP^\prime:ON = OS : OP^{\prime\prime} \implies OP^\prime \cdot OP^{\prime\prime} = r^2
Metric The associated
metric tensor of the specific stereographic projection described in the beginning of this section (which sends the "south pole" (0, 0, −1) of the unit sphere to (0, 0), and the equator to the unit circle) is given by : ds^2 = 4 \frac{\sum_i dx_i^2}{\left(1+\sum_i x_i^2\right)^2} = \frac{ 4\, \lVert d \mathbf{x} \rVert \vphantom{l}^2 }{ \bigl(1 + \lVert \mathbf{x} \rVert \vphantom{l}^2 \bigr) ^2 } where the
xi are the Cartesian coordinates of the Euclidean plane onto which the sphere is projected. In comparison, the equation for the corresponding metric of the
Poincaré disk model of hyperbolic space looks equivalent, except for a sign difference in the denominator. ==Wulff net== Stereographic projection plots can be carried out by a computer using the explicit formulas given above. However, for graphing by hand these formulas are unwieldy. Instead, it is common to use graph paper designed specifically for the task. This special graph paper is called a
stereonet or
Wulff net, after the Russian mineralogist
George (Yuri Viktorovich) Wulff. The Wulff net shown here is the stereographic projection of the grid of
parallels and meridians of a
hemisphere centred at a point on the
equator (such as the Eastern or Western hemisphere of a planet). In the figure, the area-distorting property of the stereographic projection can be seen by comparing a grid sector near the center of the net with one at the far right or left. The two sectors have equal areas on the sphere. On the disk, the latter has nearly four times the area of the former. If the grid is made finer, this ratio approaches exactly 4. On the Wulff net, the images of the parallels and meridians intersect at right angles. This orthogonality property is a consequence of the angle-preserving property of the stereographic projection. (However, the angle-preserving property is stronger than this property. Not all projections that preserve the orthogonality of parallels and meridians are angle-preserving.) For an example of the use of the Wulff net, imagine two copies of it on thin paper, one atop the other, aligned and tacked at their mutual center. Let be the point on the lower unit hemisphere whose spherical coordinates are (140°, 60°) and whose Cartesian coordinates are (0.321, 0.557, −0.766). This point lies on a line oriented 60° counterclockwise from the positive -axis (or 30° clockwise from the positive -axis) and 50° below the horizontal plane . Once these angles are known, there are four steps to plotting : • Using the grid lines, which are spaced 10° apart in the figures here, mark the point on the edge of the net that is 60° counterclockwise from the point (1, 0) (or 30° clockwise from the point (0, 1)). • Rotate the top net until this point is aligned with (1, 0) on the bottom net. • Using the grid lines on the bottom net, mark the point that is 50° toward the center from that point. • Rotate the top net oppositely to how it was oriented before, to bring it back into alignment with the bottom net. The point marked in step 3 is then the projection that we wanted. To plot other points, whose angles are not such round numbers as 60° and 50°, one must visually interpolate between the nearest grid lines. It is helpful to have a net with finer spacing than 10°. Spacings of 2° are common. To find the
central angle between two points on the sphere based on their stereographic plot, overlay the plot on a Wulff net and rotate the plot about the center until the two points lie on or near a meridian. Then measure the angle between them by counting grid lines along that meridian. Image:Wulff net central angle 1.jpg|Two points and are drawn on a transparent sheet tacked at the origin of a Wulff net. Image:Wulff net central angle 2.jpg|The transparent sheet is rotated and the central angle is read along the common meridian to both points and . ==Applications within mathematics==