Lorentz transformation An isomorphism of the Möbius group with the
Lorentz group was noted by several authors: Based on previous work of
Felix Klein (1893, 1897) on
automorphic functions related to hyperbolic geometry and Möbius geometry,
Gustav Herglotz (1909) showed that
hyperbolic motions (i.e.
isometric automorphisms of a
hyperbolic space) transforming the
unit sphere into itself correspond to Lorentz transformations, by which Herglotz was able to classify the one-parameter Lorentz transformations into loxodromic, elliptic, hyperbolic, and parabolic groups. Other authors include
Emil Artin (1957),
H. S. M. Coxeter (1965), and
Roger Penrose,
Wolfgang Rindler (1984),
Tristan Needham (1997) and W. M. Olivia (2002).
Minkowski space consists of the four-dimensional real coordinate space
R4 consisting of the space of ordered quadruples of real numbers, together with a
quadratic form Q(x_0,x_1,x_2,x_3) = x_0^2-x_1^2-x_2^2-x_3^2. Borrowing terminology from
special relativity, points with are considered
timelike; in addition, if , then the point is called
future-pointing. Points with are called
spacelike. The
null cone S consists of those points where ; the
future null cone N+ are those points on the null cone with . The
celestial sphere is then identified with the collection of rays in
N+ whose initial point is the origin of
R4. The collection of
linear transformations on
R4 with positive
determinant preserving the quadratic form
Q and preserving the time direction form the
restricted Lorentz group . In connection with the geometry of the celestial sphere, the group of transformations is identified with the group of Möbius transformations of the sphere. To each , associate the
hermitian matrix X=\begin{bmatrix} x_0+x_1 & x_2+ix_3\\ x_2-ix_3 & x_0-x_1 \end{bmatrix}. The
determinant of the matrix
X is equal to . The
special linear group acts on the space of such matrices via for each , and this action of preserves the determinant of
X because . Since the determinant of
X is identified with the quadratic form
Q, acts by Lorentz transformations. On dimensional grounds, covers a neighborhood of the identity of . Since is connected, it covers the entire restricted Lorentz group . Furthermore, since the
kernel of the action () is the subgroup , then passing to the
quotient group gives the
group isomorphism {{NumBlk2|:|\operatorname{PSL}(2,\Complex)\cong \operatorname{SO}^+(1,3).|2}} Focusing now attention on the case when is null, the matrix
X has zero determinant, and therefore splits as the
outer product of a complex two-vector
ξ with its complex conjugate: {{NumBlk2|:|X = \xi\bar{\xi}^\text{T}=\xi\xi^*.|3}} The two-component vector
ξ is acted upon by in a manner compatible with (). It is now clear that the kernel of the representation of on hermitian matrices is . The action of on the celestial sphere may also be described geometrically using
stereographic projection. Consider first the hyperplane in
R4 given by
x0 = 1. The celestial sphere may be identified with the sphere
S+ of intersection of the hyperplane with the future null cone
N+. The stereographic projection from the north pole of this sphere onto the plane takes a point with coordinates with x_1^2+x_2^2+x_3^2=1 to the point \left(1, \frac{x_1}{1-x_3}, \frac{x_2}{1-x_3},0\right). Introducing the
complex coordinate \zeta = \frac{x_1+ix_2}{1-x_3}, the inverse stereographic projection gives the following formula for a point on
S+: {{NumBlk2|:| \begin{align} x_1 &= \frac{\zeta+\bar{\zeta}}{\zeta\bar{\zeta}+1}\\ x_2 &= \frac{\zeta-\bar{\zeta}}{i(\zeta\bar{\zeta}+1)}\\ x_3 &= \frac{\zeta\bar{\zeta}-1}{\zeta\bar{\zeta}+1}. \end{align} |4}} The action of on the points of
N+ does not preserve the hyperplane
S+, but acting on points in
S+ and then rescaling so that the result is again in
S+ gives an action of on the sphere which goes over to an action on the complex variable
ζ. In fact, this action is by fractional linear transformations, although this is not easily seen from this representation of the celestial sphere. Conversely, for any fractional linear transformation of
ζ variable goes over to a unique
Lorentz transformation on
N+, possibly after a suitable (uniquely determined) rescaling. A more invariant description of the stereographic projection which allows the action to be more clearly seen is to consider the variable as a ratio of a pair of homogeneous coordinates for the complex projective line
CP1. The stereographic projection goes over to a transformation from to
N+ which is homogeneous of degree two with respect to real scalings {{NumBlk2|:|(z,w)\mapsto (x_0,x_1,x_2,x_3)=(z\bar{z}+w\bar{w}, z\bar{z}-w\bar{w}, z\bar{w}+w\bar{z}, i^{-1}(z\bar{w}-w\bar{z}))|5}} which agrees with () upon restriction to scales in which z\bar{z}+w\bar{w}=1. The components of () are precisely those obtained from the outer product \begin{bmatrix} x_0+x_1 & x_2+ix_3 \\ x_2-ix_3 & x_0-x_1 \end{bmatrix} = 2\begin{bmatrix} z \\ w \end{bmatrix} \begin{bmatrix} \bar{z} & \bar{w} \end{bmatrix}. In summary, the action of the restricted Lorentz group SO+(1,3) agrees with that of the Möbius group . This motivates the following definition. In dimension , the
Möbius group Möb(
n) is the group of all orientation-preserving
conformal isometries of the round sphere
Sn to itself. By realizing the conformal sphere as the space of future-pointing rays of the null cone in the Minkowski space
R1,n+1, there is an isomorphism of Möb(
n) with the restricted Lorentz group SO+(1,
n+1) of Lorentz transformations with positive determinant, preserving the direction of time. Coxeter began instead with the equivalent quadratic form . He identified the Lorentz group with transformations for which is
stable. Then he interpreted the
x's as
homogeneous coordinates and , the
null cone, as the
Cayley absolute for a hyperbolic space of points . Next, Coxeter introduced the variables \xi = \frac {x_1}{x_4} , \ \eta = \frac {x_2}{x_4}, \ \zeta = \frac {x_3}{x_4} so that the Lorentz-invariant quadric corresponds to the sphere . Coxeter notes that
Felix Klein also wrote of this correspondence, applying stereographic projection from to the complex plane z = \frac{\xi + i \eta}{1 - \zeta}. Coxeter used the fact that circles of the inversive plane represent planes of hyperbolic space, and the general homography is the product of inversions in two or four circles, corresponding to the general hyperbolic displacement which is the product of inversions in two or four planes.
Hyperbolic space As seen above, the Möbius group acts on Minkowski space as the group of those isometries that preserve the origin, the orientation of space and the direction of time. Restricting to the points where in the positive light cone, which form a model of
hyperbolic 3-space H, we see that the Möbius group acts on
H as a group of orientation-preserving isometries. In fact, the Möbius group is equal to the group of orientation-preserving isometries of hyperbolic 3-space. If we use the
Poincaré ball model, identifying the unit ball in
R3 with
H, then we can think of the Riemann sphere as the "conformal boundary" of
H. Every orientation-preserving isometry of
H gives rise to a Möbius transformation on the Riemann sphere and vice versa. == See also ==