4. A Glimpse to Teichmüleer Spaces
We briefly recall the results from Teichmüller space theory involved in the proof of Theorem 1; the details can be found, for example, in [
20,
21,
22]. It is technically more convenient to deal with functions from
.
The universal Teichmüller space is the space of quasisymmetric homeomorphisms of the unit circle factorized by Möbius maps; all Teichmüller spaces have their biholomorphic copies in .
The canonical complex Banach structure on
is defined by factorization of the ball of the Beltrami coefficients (or complex dilatations)
letting
be equivalent if the corresponding quasiconformal maps
(solutions to the Beltrami equation
with
) coincide on the unit circle
(hence, on
). Such
and the corresponding maps
are called
-
equivalent.
The following important lemma from [
12] allows one to use some other normalizations of quasiconformally extendable functions.
Lemma 3. For any Beltrami coefficient and any , there exists a point located on so that and such that for any θ satisfying the equation has a unique homeomorphic solution , which is holomorphic on the unit disk and satisfiesHence, is conformal and does not have a pole in (so at some point with ). In particular, this lemma allows one to define the Teichmüller spaces using the quasiconformally extendible univalent functions
in the unit disk
, normalizing these functions by
All such functions are holomorphic in the disk
.
The proof of Theorem 1 also involves other Teichmüller spaces. The corresponding space for the punctured disk is formed by classes of -equivalent Beltrami coefficients so that the corresponding quasiconformal automorphisms of the unit disk coincide on both boundary components (unit circle and the puncture ) and are homotopic on . This space can be endowed with a canonical complex structure of a complex Banach manifold and embedded into using uniformization of by a cyclic parabolic Fuchsian group acting discontinuously on and . The functions are lifted to as the Beltrami measurable -forms in with respect to , i.e., via , forming the Banach space ; we extend these by zero to . Then is canonically isomorphic to the subspace , where consists of elements satisfying in for all .
Due to
the Bers isomorphism theorem,
the space is biholomorphically isomorphic to the Bers fiber spaceover the universal Teichmüller space with holomorphic projection (see [20]).
This fiber space is a bounded hyperbolic domain in and represents the collection of domains as a holomorphic family over the space . For every , its orbit in is a holomorphic curve over .
The indicated isomorphism between
and
is induced by the inclusion map
forgetting the puncture at the origin via
where
is the lift of
j to
.
The Bers theorem is valid for Teichmüller spaces of all punctured hyperbolic Riemann surfaces ; we use only its special case.
The spaces
and
can be weakly (in the topology generated by the spherical metric on
) approximate by finite dimensional Teichmüller spaces
of punctured spheres (Riemann surfaces of genus zero)
defined by ordered
n-tuples
with distinct
(for details, see [
10]).
Another canonical model of is obtained again using the uniformization. This space is biholomorphic to a bounded domain in the complex Euclidean space .
Note also that all Teichmüller spaces are complete metric spaces with intrinsic Teichmüller metric defined by quasiconformal maps. By the Royden–Gardiner theorem, this metric equals the hyperbolic Kobayashi metric determined by the complex structure (see [
21,
23,
24]).
5. Proof of Theorem 1
We accomplish the proof in four steps. One can assume that .
Step 1: Renormalization of functions and lifting functional onto spaces and . Consider the classes
of univalent functions in the disk
with expansions
admitting quasiconformal extension to
, and their subclasses
consisting of
with fix point at
. The corresponding classes of univalent functions
are denoted by
and
. The closures
of their disjunct unions
in the topology of locally uniform convergence on the sphere
are compact.
The family closely relates to the class S, because every has its representative in (not necessarily unique) obtained by pre- and post-compositions of w with rotations about the origin, related by with , where is a point for which is a common point of the unit circle and the boundary of domain . The existence of such a point follows from the classical Schwarz lemma.
Now, using the relations between the coefficients
of
and the corresponding coefficients
of inversions
, given by
where
are the entire powers of
, one obtains successively the representations of
by
:
These relations transform the initial functionals
into the coefficient functional
on
depending on the corresponding coefficients
. This dependence is holomorphic from the Beltrami coefficients
and from the Schwarzians
.
For any fixed , the Taylor coefficients of functions and depend holomorphically on and on the Schwarzians as elements of . This generates holomorphic lifting the original functionals and onto the universal Teichmüller space as holomorphic functions of .
Our next goal is to lift
J onto the covering space
. To reach this, we pass again to the functional
on the ball
and apply the
-equivalence of maps
, i.e., the quotient map
acting on the homotopy of maps
on the punctured disk
. This map pushes the functional
down to a bounded holomorphic functional
on the space
. We denote this functional by
.
Now, using the Bers isomorphism theorem, we regard the points of the space
as the pairs
with
submitted to
-equivalence. This leads to a logarithmically plurisubharmonic functional
defined on the whole space
.
Step 2: Subharmonicity of maximal function generated by . The functional (11) generates for any fixed
and
the maximal function
Its argument
runs over some domain
. The supremum in (12) is taken over all
admissible for a given
(that means over the pairs
with a fixed
t).
One of the crucial steps in the proof of Theorem 1 is to establish that every inherits from subharmonicity in t. This is provided by the following lemma.
Lemma 4. Every function with a fixed is logarithmically subharmonic in some domains located in the disk .
Proof. Fix and, using the maps , apply a weak approximation of the underlying space (and simultaneously of the space ) by finite dimensional Teichmüller spaces of the punctured spheres in the topology of locally uniform convergence on .
Take the set of points
(which is dense on the unit circle) and consider the punctured spheres
and their universal holomorphic covering maps
normalized by
.
The radial slits from the infinite point to all the points form a canonical dissection of and define the simply connected surface . Any covering map determines a Fuchsian group of covering transformations uniformizing , which act discontinuosly in both disks and .
Every such group has a canonical (open) fundamental polygon of in corresponding to the dissection . It is a regular circular -gon centered at the origin of the disk and can be chosen to have a vertex at the point . The restriction of to is univalent, and as , these polygons entirely increase and exhaust the disk .
Similarly, we take in the complementary disk the mirror polygons and the covering maps which define the mirror surfaces .
Now we approximate the maps
by homeomorphisms
having in
the Beltrami coefficients
Each
is again
k-quasiconformal (where
) and compatible with the group
. As
, the coefficients
are convergent to
almost everywhere on
; thus, the maps
are convergent to
uniformly in the spherical metric on
.
Note also that depend holomorphically on as elements of ; hence, is a holomorphic function of .
As a result, one obtains that the Beltrami coefficients
and the corresponding values
are holomorphic functions of the variable
.
By Hartogs theorem, the function with is jointly holomorphic in .
We now choose in
represented as a subdomain of the space
a countable dense subset
For any of its points
, the corresponding extremal Teichüller disk
joining this point with the origin of
does not meet other points from this set (this follows from the uniqueness of Teichmüller extremal map). Recall also that each disk
is formed by the Schwarzians
with
and
with appropriate
.
The restrictions of the functional to these disks are holomorphic functions of ; moreover, the above construction provides that all these restrictions are holomorphic in t in some common domain containing the point , provided that . We use the maximal common holomorphy domain; it is located in a disk .
Maximization over
implies the logarithmically subharmonic functions
in the domain
. We consider the upper envelope of this sequence
defined in some domain
containing the origin, and take its upper semicontinuous regularization
which does not increase
(by abuse of notation, we shall denote the regularizations by the same letter as the original functions).
Repeating this for all m, one obtains the sequences of monotone increasing functions and of increasing domains exhausting a domain such that each is subharmonic on , and the limit function of this sequence is equal to the function (12). It is defined and subharmonic on the domain . The lemma follows. □
Step 3: Majorization on cover of and Koebe’s function. The above construction leads to upper semicontinuous envelope of functions (11) that is logarithmically subharmonic in some domain (which, in view of weak rotational homogeneity of J is disk of some radius ), and generically .
We now show that restricting the functional to the image of in , one obtains the best upper subharmonic dominant for , which intrinsically relates to .
First we establish the properties of the image of in the underlying space . Denote this image by . Its structure is described by the following
Lemma 2 implies that the image of the set is a three-dimensional subdomain in the space and its image in is a complex four-dimensional subdomanifold of .
We denote these images by and , respectively, and take the restriction of functional onto the second set. Our goal now is to maximize this restricted functional.
We select a dense subsequence
and define the corresponding functionals on the classes
and
replacing the original functional
as follows. Having the functions
and the corresponding
consider
as a new independent variable. Then
belong to
and
(in terms of variable
).
Noting that
is a polynomial of the form (1), we set
This yields
Similar relations are valid for the corresponding collections
of functions
Now pick the sequence of increasing products of the quotient spaces
where the equivalence relation ∼ again means
-equivalence. The Beltrami coefficients
are chosen here independently. For any
, presented in the right-hand side of (13), the corresponding values of
run over some domain
, and the corresponding collection
of the Bers isomorphisms
determines a holomorphic surjection of the space
onto the product of
m spaces
.
Letting
consider the holomorphic maps (vector-functions)
with
endowed with the polydisk norm
on
. Then by (13),
The image of the set
under this embedding is the set
, the free product of
m factors
. Note that its dimension equals
and that restriction of
to
is a polynomial map.
We now apply the construction from the previous step simultaneously to each component
on the corresponding space
in (14) and obtain in the same fashion that the function
is subharmonic in some disk
of radius
.
The rotational symmetry of the joint domain follows from symmetry of the set and of its image in and from Lemma 2 (ensuring the existence of the needed values of ).
It follows that every function
is a circularly symmetric function on its disk
, and so is the upper envelope
(on some disk
). This envelope satisfies
and attains its maximal value at the boundary point
.
Noting that the closure of
contains the functions
inverting the Koebe functions
, one derives that the radius
a must equal 4, which means that the range domain of
for
coincides with the disk
. This yields that the boundary points of this domain correspond only to functions
with
, hence only to
.
The same result is valid for the normalized functional . Note also that the homotopy (and simultaneously extremal) disk of the function is located entirely in the set
Step 4: Extremality of on S. It remains to establish that is extremal on the whole class , which is equivalent to extremality of on S.
Passing if needed to the normalized functional
one can assume that the coefficients
of
are such that
on
S. Then
(since
), and for all
,
Thus the differential metric
defined via (5) by the holomorphic map
on the unit disk (and simultaneously the homotopy and extremal disks of
in the space
) is connected with the hyperbolic metric of the unit disk by
This metric majorates all conformal metrics determined by holomorphic maps
(via pull backing of
), in particular by
, on their holomorphic disks
and on
; so
This is a consequence of the following lemma, which is a straightforward extension of the classical Ahlfors–Schwarz lemma.
Lemma 5. Let be a continuous conformal metric on the disk with growthnear the origin of Gaussian curvature in the supporting sense at its noncritical points. Then The curvature is defined byand can be understand here even in the generalized sense, i.e., with the distributional Laplacian . The relations (6) and (16), together with holomorphy with respect to
, imply that the integral distance on
generated by
satisfies
and therefore, in view of extremality of
on
,
with equality (even on one pair
) only if
. This provides the desired inequality
with the same case of equality as in (17), completing the proof of Theorem 1.