In mathematics and theoretical physics, two geometries are conformally equivalent if there exists a conformal transformation (an angle-preserving transformation) that maps one geometry to the other one.[1]
More generally, two Riemannian metrics on a manifold M are conformally equivalent if one is obtained from the other by multiplication by a positive function on M.[2] Conformal equivalence is an equivalence relation on geometries or on Riemannian metrics.
- ^ Conway, John B. (1995), Functions of One Complex Variable II, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 159, Springer, p. 29, ISBN 9780387944609.
- ^ Ramanan, S. (2005), Global Calculus, American Mathematical Society, p. 221, ISBN 9780821872406.