T-I-1
Analytical functions: conformal map and applications to hydrodynamics
This homework deals with the application of conformal maps to the study of two-dimensional hydrodynamics. A conformal map is a geometrical transformation which preserves all (oriented) crossing angles between lines. In dimension a conformal map is necessarily composed from the following limited number of transformations: translations, rotations, homothetic transformation and special conformal transformation (which is the composition of a reflection and an inversion in a sphere). However in two dimensions, , the space of conformal mappings is much larger and one can show that, given an open set , any holomorphic function such that , defines a conformal map from to . The aim of this HW is to exploit this property to study some hydrodynamic flows in two spatial dimensions.
Joukovski's transformation
The Joukovski's transformation is defined by the following application
- Compute and deduce from it the maximal ensemble on which is a conformal map. Show that is always surjective. Under which condition on the set the application on is surjective ? Give some examples of such (maximal) ensembles.
- Give the image by of the following sub-sets: (a) the half-line passing through the origin and making an angle with the -axis, (b) the circle centered at the origin of radius (analyse in particular the case ). What is the image, by , of the outside of the unit circle .
Hint: it might be useful to use polar coordinates, writing .
- Get a better idea of this Joukowski's transformation using the following code in Mathematica:
Jouk[z_] := z + 1/z
Jouk[1 - R Sin[\[Alpha]] + R Cos[u] +
I (R Cos[\[Alpha]] + R Sin[u])];
ParametricPlot[{Re[%],
Im[%]} /. {R -> 1.15, \[Alpha] -> 1.3}, {u, 0, 2 \[Pi]},
PlotRange -> {{-3, 3}, {-1, 1}}, AspectRatio -> 1/3]
- Study the conformal map in the vicinity of : we consider a "smooth" curve passing through $z=1$, with a well defined tangent. Show that the image of exhibits a cusp in . In this purpose, we parametrize this curve by with and . Write then the Taylor expansion of Failed to parse (unknown function "\math"): {\displaystyle z<\math> in <math>t=0} up to first order and the expansion of close to up to second order.