Let there exist two different spaces in the two-dimensional
Euclidean space E2. One space S is contained by a circle
with the origin as its center and a radius of
.
The space
can be defined as
.
Another space T is contained by a square of equal area, the
center of which is also at the origin. The area of space T is
equal to the area of S and therefore each side has a length of
.
A formal definition of
this space is
The morphing transformation maps any point
into a point
.
Of course, there is an entire
family of bijective functions which satisfy this property, but
few transformations can guarantee a small distance between
(x0,y0) and (x1,y1). Another important criterion is that
the transformation preserves Lebesgue measure. In other words,
if a subspace
is transformed into A', then the
area of A` is equal to the area of A.
Two premises were used to define the morphing
transformation. First, if the point (x0,y0) lies on a circle
with the origin as its center and a radius r then its
transformed point (x1,y1) lies on a square with the origin as
its center and with an area (
)
equal to that of the
circle with radius r. Second, the ratio of the distance along
this circle from (r,0) to (x0,y0) divided by the
circumference
is equal to the ratio of the distance
along the perimeter of the square from
to (x1,y1) divided by perimeter of the square
.
12pt
The equations for this transformation are
where the following substitutions are defined:
These equations are fragmented with many indicator functions
because, though the points along the circumference of a circle
are easily defined (
,
), a point
along the perimeter of a square uses different equations
depending on which of the four sides that point falls on.
Without loss of generality, we will focus exclusively on those
points which fall on the first eighth of the circle, where
.
We will call this set S', and we
will analyze the transformation from S' to a set T'. The
remaining points can be studied using the same procedure.