Local connectivity of some Julia sets containing a circle with an irrational rotation (Q1373009)

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Local connectivity of some Julia sets containing a circle with an irrational rotation
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    Local connectivity of some Julia sets containing a circle with an irrational rotation (English)
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    5 November 1997
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    Let \(\theta\) denote an irrational number of constant type in \((0,1)\), that is the partial denominators in the continued fraction expansion of \(\theta\) are bounded. Let \(P_\theta(z)= \lambda z+z^2\), where \(\lambda= \exp(2\pi i\theta)\). The main result of the paper is that the Julia set \(J(P_\theta)\) is locally connected and has zero plane Lebesgue measure. The proof is long and intricate. It works with the rational function \(f=f_\theta\), defined by \(f(z)= \rho z^2(z- 3)/(1-3z)\), where \(\rho\in S^1\) is chosen so that the homeomorphism given by the restriction of \(f\) to \(S^1\) has rotation number \(\theta\). There is a homeomorphism \(h\) of \(S^1\) which conjugates \(f\) to the rotation \(R(z)= \lambda z\), and since \(\theta\) has constant type, \(h\) is quasisymmetric and has an extension \(H\) to a quasiconormal map of the unit disc \(D\) to itself. We can define a degree-two branched covering map \(F: \widehat{\mathbb{C}}\to \widehat{\mathbb{C}}\) by \(F=f\) if \(|z|> 1\), \(F=H^{-1}RH\) if \(|z|\leq 1\). This may be said to have a ``Julia set'' \(J(F)= J(f)\setminus \bigcup_{n=0}^\infty f^{-n} (D)\). There is, further, a quasiconformal homeomorphism \(\varphi\) of \(\widehat{\mathbb{C}}\) which conjugates \(F\) to \(P_\theta\), maps \(D\) to the Siegel disc round 0 for \(P_\theta\) and maps \(J(F)\) onto \(J(P_\theta)\). This is the starting point for the paper. The goal is to prove that \(J(F)\) and \(J(f)\) are locally-connected and have measure zero, which implies the same properties for \(J(P_\theta)\). Basic for the proof are the Świątec a priori bounds for the ratios of closest returns of the critical point (here 1) for a circle map with critical point to itself. This is a reason for working with \(f\) rather than \(P_\theta\). Further, the proof hinges on a geometric construction, called a ``puzzle'' by the author, which allows the transference of the a priori (real) bounds to complex bounds for the Julia sets. The methods eventually prove local connectivity of \(J(f)\), first at \(z=1\) and then by further technical arguments to the whole Julia set.
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    circle maps
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    quasisymmetric function
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    Julia set
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    local connectivity
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