$\DeclareMathOperator\Vol{Vol}$This is a [cross-post][1].

Let $0<b<1$ be a fixed parameter, and let $(R(\theta),\theta)$ be the polar coordinates of the ellipse
$$E=\{(x,y) \in \mathbb R^2 \, | \,  \Bigl(\frac{x}{1/b}\Bigr)^2+\Bigr(\frac{y}{b}\Bigr)^2=1\}.$$
Set
$$D=\{(x,y) \in \mathbb R^2 \, | \,  0<\Bigl(\frac{x}{1/b}\Bigr)^2+\Bigl(\frac{y}{b}\Bigr)^2 \le 1\}=\bigcup_{0<r\le1}r E,$$
and let $f:D \to D$ be given in polar coordinates by
\begin{equation}
\label{1}
\bigl(\tilde r  R(\theta),\theta\bigr )\mapsto \biggl(\psi(\tilde r)R\bigl(\theta+h(\tilde r)\bigr),\theta+h(\tilde r)\biggr). \tag{1}
\end{equation}

$f(\tilde rE)=\psi(\tilde r)E$; the "scale" is given by $\psi$ and the "phase" is given by $h$. If I am not mistaken, the Jacobian of $f$ is given by
$$
Jf=\frac{\psi(\tilde r)\psi'(\tilde r)}{R(\theta)}R\bigl(\theta+h(\tilde r)\bigr)\biggl(\frac{R\bigl(\theta+h(\tilde r)\bigr)}{\tilde r R(\theta)}+\frac{R'(\theta)}{R^2(\theta)}h'(\tilde r) \biggr).
$$

**Question:** Do there exist a $C^1$ monotone bijection $\psi:(0,1] \to (0,1]$, and a $C^1$ function $h:(0,1] \to \mathbb{R}$ that satisfy $Jf=1$ everywhere, besides $\psi(x)=x$ and $h=0$ and $h=\pi$ (which correspond to $f=\operatorname{Id}$ and to $f(x,y)=-(x,y)$).

If $h$ is constant, then it easily follows that $h=0$ or $h=\pi$ and $\psi(x)=x$, so I am looking for solutions with non-constant $h$.

_______
*Comment:* $$R(\theta)\mathrel{:=}\frac{b}{\sqrt{1-\bigl(e \cos(\theta)\bigr)^2}}, e=\sqrt{1-b^4}.$$

[1]:https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/4048696/is-there-an-area-preserving-concentric-diffeomorphism-of-the-ellipse