Quasiconformal Homeomorphisms Explicitly Determining the Basic Curve Quasi-Invariants

: The classical Belinskii theorem implies that any sufﬁciently regular function µ ( z ) on the extended complex plane (cid:98) C with a small C 1 + α norm generates via the two-dimensional Cauchy integral a quasiconformal automorphism w of (cid:98) C with the Beltrami coefﬁcient (cid:101) µ = µ + O ( (cid:107) µ (cid:107) 2 ) . We consider µ supported in arbitrary bounded quasiconformal disks and show that under appropriate assumptions of µ , this automorphism explicitly provides the basic curvelinear quasi-invariants associated with conformal and quasiconformal maps


Preliminaries 1.Preamble
An important, open problem in geometric complex analysis establishing algorithms for explicit or approximate determination of the basic curvilinear and analytic quasi-invariant functionals intrinsically connected with conformal and quasiconformal maps, such as their Teichmüller and Grunsky norms, Fredholm eigenvalues and the quasireflection coefficients of associated quasicircles.It is important also for the potential theory.The investigations in this field of complex analysis were originated by the classical works of Ahlfors, Schiffer, Kühnau, Schober and continued by many other mathematicians.However, the problem has not been solved completely even for convex polygons.
This problem has intrinsic interest also in view of its connection with the geometry of Teichmüller spaces and with the approximation theory.It is crucial also for numerical aspects of quasiconformal analysis.
The present paper is connected with the author's investigations in this direction (see, for example, [1]) and considers the classes of univalent holomorphic functions not admitting the canonical Teichmüller extremal extensions.We give a complete solution of the indicated problem for some natural broad classes of Beltrami coefficients supported in the generic quasiconformal domains.All previous results were obtained only for the canonical unit disk D = {|z| < 1}.
Our approach is different and involves the deep results from Teichmüller space theory and complex differential geometry.To have compactness of this class in the topology of locally uniform convergence on C, we add the third normalization condition f (0) = 0.

Some Invariants and Norms of Univalent Functions with Quasiconformal Extension
The Beltrami coefficients of these extensions are supported in the unit disk D and run over the unit ball Each µ ∈ Belt(D) 1 determines a unique homeomorphic solution to the Beltrami equation ∂w = µ∂w on C (quasiconformal automorphism of C) normalized by the assumptions One of the important invariants intrinsically connected with univalence is the Schwarzian derivative As it is well known (see [2]), these derivatives belong to the complex Banach space B = B(D * ) of hyperbolically bounded holomorphic functions in the disk D * with norm In the case of functions f µ ∈ Σ Q , their Schwarzians S f µ run over a bounded domain in B modeling the universal Teichmüller space T. The space B is dual to the Bergman space A 1 (D * ), a subspace of L 1 (D * ) formed by integrable holomorphic functions (quadratic differentials ϕ(z)dz 2 ) on D * .Note that ϕ(z) = O(z −4 ) near z = ∞.For the needed results from Teichmüller space theory, see [3][4][5].
The importance of the differential invariant S w (z) in mathematics is essentially caused by its Moebius invariance.The chain rule for Schwarzians yields which, for a fractal linear map σ(w), implies S σ•w (z) = S w (z).
The Taylor coefficients b j of f ∈ Σ Q reflect the fundamental intrinsic features of these functions following their conformality.There is also another important coefficient collection naturally prescribed to normalized univalent functions in the disk.Namely, one defines for any f ∈ Σ Q its Grunsky coefficients α mn from the expansion log where the principal branch of the logarithmic function is chosen.These coefficients satisfy the inequality for anysequence x = (x n ) from the unit sphere S(l 2 ) of the Hilbert space l 2 with norm |x n | 2 1/2 ; conversely, the inequality (2) also is sufficient for the univalence of a locally univalent function in D * (cf.[6,7]).The minimum k( f ) of dilatations k(w µ ) = µ ∞ among all quasiconformal extensions w µ (z) of f onto the whole plane C (forming the equivalence class of f ) is called the Teichmüller norm of this function.Hence, where d T denotes the Teichmüller-Kobayashi distance on the space T.This quantity dominates the Grunsky norm For most functions f , we have the strong inequality (moreover, the functions satisfying this inequality form a dense subset of Σ, see [8]), while the functions with the equal norms play a crucial role in many applications of quasiconformal analysis.Thus, it is important to find some broad collections of univalent functions with κ( f ) = k( f ).
These norms coincide only when any extremal Beltrami coefficient µ 0 for f (i.e., with Here, A 1 (D) denotes the subspace in L 1 (D) formed by integrable holomorphic functions (quadratic differentials ψ(z)dz 2 on D, and A 2 1 (D) is its subset consisting of ψ with zeros of even order on D, i.e., of the squares of holomorphic functions (see [9][10][11]).Note that, due to [9], every ψ ∈ A 2 1 (D) has the form and Note that all notions introduced above are also valid for the univalent functions F(z) in the unit disk D normalized by F(0) = 0, F (0) = 1 (extending quasiconformally onto D * ).Their inversions f F (z) = 1/F(1/z) belong to Σ Q and are zero free on D * .The Grunsky coefficients of these functions (and other related notions) are defined similar to (1) and κ(F) = κ( f F ), k(F) = k( f F ).But it is technically more convenient to deal with the class Σ Q .

Generalization of Grunsky Inequalities
The method of Grunsky inequalities has been generalized in several directions, even to bordered Riemann surfaces X with a finite number of boundary components (see [7,12,13]).We consider these inequalities in unbounded simply connected hyperbolic domains, for which a quasiconformal variant of this theory has been developed in [10].
Let L ⊂ C be an oriented bounded quasicircle separating the points 0 and ∞.Denote its interior and exterior domains by D and D * (so 0 ∈ D, ∞ ∈ D * ).Then, if δ D (z) denotes the Euclidean distance of z from the boundary of D and λ D (z)|dz| is its hyperbolic metric of Gaussian curvature −4, we have (the right-hand inequality follows from the Schwarz lemma and the left from the Koebe one-quarter theorem).
For such a domain D * ∞, one must use instead of (1) the expansion where χ denotes a conformal map of D * onto the disk D * so that χ(∞) = ∞, χ (∞) > 0. By Milin's univalence theorem [7], generalizing the Grunsky result for the disk, a holomorphic function in a neighborhood of z = ∞ is extended to a univalent function on the domain D * if and only if its coefficients β mn satisfy sup ∞ ∑ m,n=1 Accordingly, the generalized Grunsky norm is defined by The coefficients β mn relate to holomorphic functions ϕ n (z) in D whose derivatives ϕ n (z) form a complete orthonormal system in A 2 (D); in the case of D = D, one can use the powers z n , n = 0, 1, . . . .We now consider the class Σ Q (D * ) of univalent functions in domain D * with expansions near z = ∞, admitting quasiconformal extensions onto the complementary domain D. Similar to the above, we subject these extensions to f (0) = 0. Their Beltrami coefficients run over the ball For each µ ∈ Belt(D) 1 , we consider its Teichmüller equivalence class [µ] consisting of µ ∈ Belt(D) 1 such that the maps f ν coincide with f µ on the boundary ∂D of domain D. These classes are in one-to-one correspondence with the points of the space T, and the quotient space Belt(D) 1 / ∼ with the defining projection µ → [µ] is biholomorphically equivalent to T.
The extremal Beltrami coefficients µ 0 , minimizing the dilatation µ ∞ in the equivalence classes [µ], play a crucial norm in geometric function theory, Teichmüller space theory, numerical mathematics, etc.
There is a well-known criterion for extremality given by the Hamilton-Krushkal-Reich-Strebel theorem.We present this theorem and its relation to the Grunsky norm via the following theorem.
Here, A 1 (D) denotes the subspace in L 1 (D) formed by integrable holomorphic functions (quadratic differentials ψ(z)dz 2 on D, and A 2 1 (D) is its subset consisting of ψ with zeros of even order on D, i.e., of the squares of holomorphic functions.
In addition, if the equivalence class of f is a Strebel point of the space T with base point D * , which means that this class contains the Teichmüller extremal extension [9,10,14,15]).An important fact is that the Strebel points are dense in any Teichmüller space (see [4]), which yields, in particular, that the univalent function of any f (z) on D is approximated in the strong topology of the space T by functions having qusiconformal extensions to C and constant regular dilatation in the complementary domain.
In the case of the generic quasidisk D, the representation of elements of the space A 2 1 (D) is much more complicated than (4).As was established in [10], every x m x n P m (z)P n (z)dxdy, where x l 2 = ω L 2 (here x = (x n )) and P n are well-defined polynomials arising from the expansion with ϕ n = χ n (given above); the degree of P n equals n.It coincides with the representation (4) for ψ ∈ A 2 1 (D).Even the case of ellipse is complicated.This case has its intrinsic interest, because for an ellipse, the orthonormal basis {ϕ n } indicated above can be given explicitly using the Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind.We shall describe this example in more detail in Section 3.

Substantial Boundary Points and Teichmüller Extremality
Assume that µ 0 ∈ Belt(D) 1 is extremal in its class but not of the Teichmüller type.A point z 0 ∈ ∂D is called substantial (or essential) for µ 0 if for any ε > 0, there exists a neighborhood U 0 of z 0 such that sup so the maximal dilatation k(w µ 0 ) = µ ∞ is attained on D by approaching this point.
In addition, there exists a sequence {ψ n } ⊂ A 1 (D) such that ψ n (z) → 0 locally uniformly on D but ψ n = 1 for any n, and Such sequences are called degenerated.
The image of a substantial point is a common point of two quasiconformal arcs, which can be of the spiral type.
As was mentioned above, the equivalence classes [µ] containing the Teichmüller coefficients correspond to the Strebel points of the space T and are dense on this space.

Quasiconformal Reflections and Fredholm Eigenvalues
The Teichmüller and Grunsky norms are intrinsically connected with the quasiconformal reflections, Fredholm eigenvalues and other quasi-invariants of quasiconformal curves.We briefly outline the main notions and results; for the details, see [8,11,[16][17][18].
The quasiconformal reflections (or quasireflections) are the orientation-reversing quasiconformal homeomorphisms of the sphere C, which preserve point-wise some (oriented) quasicircle L ⊂ C and interchange its interior and exterior domains.
In other words, quasireflections are topological involutions of the sphere C whose fixed Jordan curves are the quasicircles.
One defines for L its reflection coefficient taking the infimum over all quasireflections across L. Due to [14,19], the dilatation where k L is the minimal dilatation among all orientation-preserving quasiconformal automorphisms f * of C carrying the unit circle onto L, and k( f The reflection with dilatation Q L is extremal.A remarkable and very useful fact established by Ahlfors is that any quasicircle also admits a Lipschitz-continuous quasireflection with some coefficient C(q L ) (see [19]).
The Fredholm eigenvalues ρ n of an oriented smooth closed Jordan curve L ⊂ C are the eigenvalues of its double-layer potential, or equivalently, of the integral equation where n ζ denotes the outer normal and ds ζ is the length element at ζ ∈ L. These values are crucial in many applications in various fields of complex analysis, potential theory, continuum mechanics and physics (see [1,18,[20][21][22][23]). The least positive eigenvalue ρ L = ρ 1 is naturally connected with conformal and quasiconformal maps and can be defined for any oriented closed Jordan curve L by where G and G * are, respectively, the interior and exterior of L; D denotes the Dirichlet integral, and the supremum is taken over all functions to be u continuous on C and harmonic on G ∪ G * .The known basic tools for quantitative estimation of the Freholm eigenvalues ρ L of quasicircles is given by Ahlfors' inequality 1/ρ L ≤ q L , where q L denotes the minimal dilatation of quasireflections across L [16], and by the fundamental Kühnau-Schiffer theorem [11,24], which states that the value ρ L is reciprocal to the Grunsky norm κ( f ) of the Riemann mapping function of the exterior domain of L.
Unfortunately, the Ahlfors inequality gives only a rough upper bound for ρ L , while the application of the Kühnau-Schiffer result requires knowledge of the exact value of the Grunsky norm.Thus, the explicit or even approximate determination of these quasiinvariants remains an important open problem.
For all functions f ∈ S Q (i.e., univalent in the disk D * ) with k( f ) = κ( f ), we have the exact explicit values We do not touch here the topics concerning the quasireflections across quasi-intervals or across their finite collections, to which the notion of Fredholm eigenvalues can also be extended.

Metrics with Negative Generalized Gaussian Curvature
We shall apply the conformal metrics ds = λ(t)|dt| on the disk D with λ(t) ≥ 0 (called also semi-metrics), having the negative generalized Gaussian curvature.Such a curvature is defined for an upper semicontinuous Finsler metric ds = λ|dt| in a domain Ω ⊂ C by where ∆ is the generalized Laplacian Note that this is equivalent to regarding the differential operator ∆ = 4∂ 2 /∂z∂z in the distributional sense.
Similarly to C 2 functions, for which ∆ coincides with the usual Laplacian, one obtains that λ is subharmonic on Ω if and only if ∆λ(t) ≥ 0; hence, at the points t 0 of local maximum of λ with λ(t 0 ) > −∞, we have ∆λ(t 0 ) ≤ 0. This gives rise to the sectional holomorphic curvature of a Finsler metric on a complex Banach manifold X, which is defined as the supremum of the curvatures (8) over appropriate collections of holomorphic maps from the disk into X for a given tangent direction in the image.
As is well known [25,26], the holomorphic curvature of the Kobayashi-Teichmüller metric K T (x, v) of the universal Teichmüller space T equals −4 at all points (x, v) of the tangent bundle T (T) over T. Instead, the holomorphic curvature of metric λ κ generated on D by the Grunsky Finsler structure satisfies the inequality ∆ log λ ≥ 4λ 2 , where ∆ is again the generalized Laplacian (see [8]).
We also shall apply the metrics whose generalized curvature satisfies a more general inequality ∆ log λ ≥ Kλ 2 with K = const > 0.

Basic Underlying Theorems
First of all, we essentially use the following remarkable result established by P.P. Belinskii [27], which gives rise to other investigations.Theorem 1 ([27]).Let a function µ(ζ) be defined on the plane C and C 1 -smooth, up to the jumps on a finite number of closed smooth curves.Let provides a quasiconformal homeomorphism of the whole plane C, whose Beltrami coefficient is and this map differs from the map with Beltrami coefficient µ(z) and the same normalization up to a quantity of order ε 2 uniformly in any bounded domain.
This theorem plays a crucial role in the variational calculus for quasiconformal maps.Its original proof in [27], especially of the estimate (10), is complicated and relates on the deep results from geometric function theory and from the potential theory.Now this proof can be essentially simplified and shortened by including the map (9) into a holomorphic motion of the Riemann sphere C = C {∞} and applying the lambda lemma for such motions.
Theorem 1 involves only sufficiently smooth Beltrami coefficients µ with small norm.It was recently strengthened by the author and applied to the complex and potential geometry of the universal Teichmüller space.
Note that Theorem 1 relates to the problem of I.N.Vekua of 1961 on the homeomorphy of approximate solutions of the singular two-dimensional integral equation intrinsically connected with the Beltrami equation by constructing quasiconformal maps.Consider in the space L p (C) with p > 2 the well-known integral operators assuming for simplicity that ρ has a compact support in C.Then, the second integral exists as a Cauchy principal value, and the derivative ∂ z T generically is understood to be distributional.
One of the fundamental results of quasiconformal theory is that every quasiconformal automorphism where ρ is the solution in L p (for 2 < p < p 0 (k)) of the integral equation given by the series ρ = µ + µΠµ + µΠµ(Πµ) + . . . .
Denote by µ n the n-th partial sum of the series (11), and set The question of Vekua was whether all f n also are homeomorphisms.Theorem 1 solves it positively for the first iteration f 1 (z), provided that Beltrami coefficient µ is sufficiently regular.
There is the counterexample of T. Iwaniec, which shows that the smoothness and smallness assumptions in the Belinskii theorem cannot be dropped completely.A simple modification of his construction allows us to define ε ∈ (0, 1) and a Beltrami coefficient µ so that the second iteration is not injective in D. The details are exposed in survey [26].
We use here the special case of Theorem 1 for µ ∈ Belt(D) 1 .
The next underlying result is the following theorem proven in [28].
Theorem 2. Every Beltrami coefficient µ ∈ Belt(D) 1 , which belongs to the Sobolev space W 1,p (D), p > 2, and has a substantial point z 0 ∈ S 1 , is extremal in its equivalence class, and the function f µ |D * has equal Teichmüller and Grunsky norms, and This theorem admits a weakened extension to arbitrary quasidisks as follows.Letting we have the following.Theorem 3 ([28]).Let a Beltrami coefficient µ ∈ Belt(D) 1 belong to W 1,p (D) with p ≥ 2 and have a substantial point z 0 on the boundary ∂D.Let µ(z) → 0 for z filling a subarc γ ⊂ ∂D (which depends on µ) as z approaches γ from inside D.Then, µ is extremal in its equivalence class, and the Grunsky norm The difference between the hypotheses of Theorems 2 and 3 is caused by the fact that the first step in the proof of Theorem 2 is a special case of Theorem 3 (i.e., it concerns the Beltrami coefficients µ ∈ Belt(D) 1 vanishing on a subarc of S 1 ), while the next steps of this proof essentially involve a result of Kühnau, which is established only for the canonical disk D * .

Main Theorem
The main result of this paper is the following theorem, which strengthens Theorem 1 and shows that quasiconformal map w µ defined by integral (9) inherits the main basic properties brought by the original coefficient µ.We also give some possible extensions of this important result.One of the interesting open problems here is to describe all bounded convex polygons which obey the relations (9).
We precede the proof of Theorem 4 by the following important remark.From (8), we have which implies, in view of well-known properties of the integral operators, that T and Φ simultaneously depend holomorphically on complex parameters.
Proof of Theorem 4. First observe that the Grunsky coefficients α mn ( f µ ) of functions f µ ∈ Σ Q generate for each x = (x n ) ∈ l 2 with x = 1 the holomorphic maps of the ball Belt(D) 1 and of the universal Teichmüller space T into the unit disk D, and This holomorphy follows from the holomorphy of coefficients α mn with respect to µ ∈ Belt(D) 1 and S f µ ∈ T and the well-known estimate which holds for any finite M, N and 1 ≤ j ≤ M, 1 ≤ l ≤ N (see [29], p. 61).
The same is valid for the generalized Grunsky coefficients β mn (S f µ ) of the functions f µ ∈ Σ(D * ) generating the holomorphic maps with sup The holomorphy of these functions follows from the holomorphy of coefficients β mn with respect to Beltrami coefficients µ ∈ Belt(D) 1 mentioned above using the corresponding estimate which holds for any finite M, N and 1 ≤ j ≤ M, 1 ≤ l ≤ N; this estimate is a simple corollary of the Milin univalence theorem (cf.[7], p. 193).
Similar arguments imply that the maps (18) regarded as functions of points ϕ µ = S f µ in the universal Teichmüller space T (with the base point D * ) are holomorphic on T.
Note also that both norms κ D * and k( f ) are continuous logarithmically plurisubharmonic functions on T [28].Now, given a function f ∈ Σ Q , take its extremal extension f µ (i.e., such that k( f ) = µ ∞ ) and set µ * = µ/ µ ∞ and pass to maps f tµ * (z) with |t| < 1.It follows from Theorem 2 that the disk and its image φ T (D(µ)) are geodesic (extremal) either from the Teichmüller, Kobayashi and Carathéodory metrics on T (which are equal on this disk and have the holomorphic curvature −4).Denote these metrics by τ T , d T , c T and their infinitesimal (differential) forms by Using the functions (15) determined by Beltrami coefficients from D(µ), we pull back the hyperbolic metric of the disk D, obtaining on this disk the conformal metrics λ h x (t)|dt| with All these metrics have at their noncritical points the Gaussian curvature −4.Now, take the upper envelope of these metrics λ κ (t) = sup{λ h x (t) : x ∈ S(l 2 )} (19) followed by its upper semicontinuous regularization, which determines a logarithmically subharmonic metric λ κ (t) on the unit disk.This metric is circularly symmetric, i.e., satisfies λ κ (t) = λ κ (|t|).Its generalized Gaussian curvature κ λ κ (t) ≤ −4 (cf.[8]).In fact, the metric ( 19) is the differential (infinitesimal) form of the norm κ D * ( f ) for f = f ν ∈ D(µ).
We have the relation while the assumption of Theorem 4 gives, by Theorem 2 and equality ( 16), the relations A refined comparison of these metrics is obtained by applying Minda's maximum principle given by the following.The proof of this lemma related to the Ahlfors-Schwarz lemma [16] is given in [30]; for its variations, see [31].
We choose a sufficiently small neighborhood U 0 of the origin t = 0 and put Then, in this neighborhood, we have Consider the function u = log λ κ λ K .
It follows that the function u satisfies on U 0 the inequality (21) with K = 8M 2 .
Applying Lemma 1 to u and noting that the equality (20) yields one derives by this lemma that both metrics λ κ and λ K must be equal on U 0 , and in a similar way, their equality on the entire disk D. This proves the infinitesimal version of Theorem 4. Finally, to obtain the global version, we apply the following reconstruction lemma for the Grunsky norm proven in [8], which provides that this norm is the integrated form of λ κ along the Teichmüller extremal disks (Functions ( 15) and ( 18) allow one to determine the metric λ κ on the whole space T; it corresponds to another canonical Finsler structure on the space T generated by the Grunsky coefficients).Lemma 2. On any Teichmüller extremal disk we have the equality Integrating the metrics λ κ and λ α along the extremal disk D(µ * ), one obtains the required right equality in (4).Other equalities in (4) follow from the classical relations for quasi-invariants q L and ρ L of the curves L = w µ (S 1 ) and L = w µ (S 1 ), indicated in Section 1.3.This completes the proof of the theorem.

Extensions of Theorem 4
Theorem 4 can be extended in a weaker form to univalent functions on arbitrary unbounded quasidisks D * taking the integrals of type (9) over the complementary quasidisks D with appropriate functions µ compatible with Theorem 3.
As an example, let us consider the integral over the interior E of ellipse with the foci at −1, 1 and semiaxes a, b (a > b).Noting that an orthonormal basis in the Hilbert space A 2 (E ) of the square integrable holomorphic functions on E is formed by the polynomials where r = (a + b) 2 and U n (z) are the Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind, (see [32]), one concludes that for any Beltramu coefficient µ satisfying the assumptions of Theorem 3, the following equalities are valid: where E * means the exterior of the indicated ellipse.We also mention the following useful extension of Theorem 4. Let L ⊂ C be an oriented closed C 1+σ -smooth Jordan curve (hence, a quasicircle), separating the points 0 and ∞ (σ > 0).Denote its interior and exterior domains by D L and D * L , respectively, and consider the corresponding spaces A 1 (D L ) and A 2 1 (D L ).
be a holomorphic map of the ball Belt(D L ) 1 of itself with µ 0 (z), satisfying the assumptions of Theorem 3.Then, for sufficiently small |t| > 0, the function determines a quasiconformal automorphism w(z, t) of the sphere C with the complex dilatation µ(z, t) * = tµ 0 (z) + O(t with a uniform estimate of the remainder for |t| ≤ t 0 < t 0 . In the case of the disk, this theorem simultaneously implies the approximate values of the reflection coefficients and Fredholm eigenvalues of quasicircles L t = w(S 1 ; t) and is valid for all µ 0 satisfying the assumptions of Theorem 2.
Proof of Theorem 5. We now have w(z, t) = z + Tµ(•, t), and this function is holomorphic in t (in the L ∞ -norm).This determines (at least for sufficiently small |t|) a holomorphic motion of C generating the holomorphic disks in the ball Belt(D L ) 1 and in the space T.

Examples
The question of explicitly constructing the examples illustrating Theorems 4 and 5 (as well as the related results of some other papers in this direction devoted to the characterization of the associated curvelinear functionals) is complicated.The complications are caused by the requirement that the point z 0 ∈ S 1 , at which the modulus of a given Beltrami coefficient µ attains its maximum on the closed disk D, must be simultaneously a substantial point for the corresponding quasisymmetric function f µ |S 1 .
We provide here such examples combining Theorems 4 and 5, with the results presented in the survey [1].
Let L ⊂ C be a closed (oriented) unbounded quasicircle passing through the infinite point, with the convex interior, which is C 1+δ smooth at all finite points (δ > 0) and has, at infinity, the asymptotes approaching the interior angle πα ∞ < 0. It is proven in [1], by applying the holomorphic motions and the rather deep results from the Finsler geometry of universal Teichmüller space, that for any such curve, we have the equalities where f is the conformal mapping function of D * onto the exterior domain of L. These equalities imply that the modulus of the extremal Beltrami coefficient µ of the prescribed univalent function f ∈ Σ Q attains its maximal value, equal to 1 − |α ∞ | at the point z 0 ∈ S 1 , which is the image of w = ∞ under the map f −1 , and this Beltrami coefficient is not of the Teichmüller type.Therefore, the point z 0 of its maximum is substantial.
Actually, Theorem 4 provides in this case another proof of the equalities ( 24), but it does not provide for the maximum the exact value 1 − |α ∞ |.This geometric quantity is intrinsically connected with the curve L.
A more complicate example is obtained taking the curves L with two angle points: w 0 ∈ C and w = ∞, with the angle openings πα 0 > 0 and πα ∞ assuming again that the interior of L is convex.The indicated theorem from [1] provides for such curves the relations κ( f ) = k( f ) = q L = 1/ρ L = max(1 − |α 0 |, 1 − |α ∞ |).
These equalities yield simultaneously the exact values of the reflection coefficient and other functionals for the convex curvelinear lunes bounded by two smooth arcs with the common endpoints a, b because any such lune is a Moebius image of the interior domain for the above curve L.
The corresponding Schwarzian derivatives S f belong to the Banach space B(D * ) of holomorphic functions on D * with finite norm ϕ B(D * ) = sup D * λ D * (z)|ϕ(z)| and fill its bounded subdomain modeling the universal Teichmüller space with the base point D * .

Lemma 1 .
If a function u : D → [−∞, +∞) is upper semicontinuous in a domain Ω ⊂ C and its generalized Laplacian satisfies the inequality ∆u(z) ≥ Ku(z) (22) with some positive constant K at any point z ∈ D, where u(z) > −∞, and if lim sup z→ζ u(z) ≤ 0 for all ζ ∈ ∂D, then either u(z) < 0 for all z ∈ D or u(z) ≡ 0 on D.