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On invariant measures of ‘satellite’ infinitely renormalizable quadratic polynomials

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 November 2024

GENADI LEVIN*
Affiliation:
Institute of Mathematics, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Givat Ram, Jerusalem 91904, Israel
FELIKS PRZYTYCKI
Affiliation:
Institute of Mathematics, Polish Academy of Sciences, Śniadeckich St. 8, 00-956 Warsaw, Poland (e-mail: feliksp@impan.pl)
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Abstract

Let $f(z)=z^2+c$ be an infinitely renormalizable quadratic polynomial and $J_\infty $ be the intersection of forward orbits of ‘small’ Julia sets of its simple renormalizations. We prove that if f admits an infinite sequence of satellite renormalizations, then every invariant measure of $f: J_\infty \to J_\infty $ is supported on the postcritical set and has zero Lyapunov exponent. Coupled with [13], this implies that the Lyapunov exponent of such f at c is equal to zero, which partly answers a question posed by Weixiao Shen.

Type
Original Article
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press

1. Introduction

We consider the dynamics $f: \mathbb {C}\to \mathbb {C}$ of a quadratic polynomial. Up to a linear change of coordinates, f has the form $f_c(z)=z^2+c$ for some $c\in \mathbb {C}$ . In this paper, which is the sequel to [Reference Levin and Przytycki12], we assume that f is infinitely renormalizable. Moreover, in the main results we assume that f has infinitely many ‘satellite renormalizations’; see, for example, [Reference McMullen16] or below for definitions. The dynamics, geometry and topology of such a system can be very non-trivial, in particular, due to the fact that different renormalization levels are largely independent.

Historically, the first example of an infinitely renormalizable one-dimensional map was probably the Feigenbaum period-doubling quadratic polynomial $f_{c_F}$ , where $c_F=-1.4\ldots $ [Reference Feigenbaum6]. The Julia set of $f_{c_F}$ is locally connected [Reference Hu and Jiang7], which follows from so-called ‘complex bounds’, a compactness property of renormalizations. This is a key tool since [Reference Sullivan28], in particular, in proving the Feigenbaum–Coullet–Tresser universality conjecture [Reference Lyubich15, Reference McMullen17, Reference Sullivan28]. Perhaps more striking for us are Douady and Hubbard’s examples of infinitely renormalizable quadratic polynomials with non-locally connected Julia sets [Reference Cheraghi and Pedramfar3, Reference Cheraghi and Shishikura4, Reference Levin9Reference Levin11, Reference Milnor18, Reference Sorensen27]. As for the Feigenbaum polynomial $f_{c_F}$ , all the renormalizations of such maps are satellite, although, contrary to $f_{c_F}$ , the combinatorics is unbounded (which, in turn, implies that those maps cannot have complex bounds [Reference Blokh, Levin, Oversteegen and Timorin1]).

The dynamics of every holomorphic endomorphism of the Riemann sphere $g:\hat {\mathbb {C}}\to \hat {\mathbb {C}}$ classically splits $\hat {\mathbb {C}}$ into two subsets: the Fatou set $F(g)$ and its complement, the Julia set $J(g)$ , where $F(g)$ is the maximal (possibly empty) open set where the sequence of iterates $g^n$ , $n=0,1,\ldots $ forms a normal (that is, a precompact) family. See, for example, [Reference Carleson and Gamelin2, Reference Milnor20] for the Fatou–Julia theory and [Reference Rees26] for a recent survey.

If g is a polynomial, then the Julia set $J(g)$ coincides with the boundary of the basin of infinity $A(\infty )=\{z\in \mathbb {C}| \lim _{n\to \infty }g^n(z)=\infty \}$ of g. The complement $\mathbb {C}\setminus A(g)$ is called the filled Julia set $K(g)$ of the polynomial g. The compact $K(g)\subset \mathbb {C}$ is connected if and only if it contains all critical points of g in the complex plane.

A quadratic polynomial $f_c$ with connected filled Julia set $K(f)$ is renormalizable if, for some topological disks $U\Subset V$ around the critical point $0$ of $f_c$ and some $p\ge 2$ (period of renormalization), the restriction $F:=f_c^p:U\to V$ is a proper branched covering map (called a polynomial-like map) of degree $2$ and the non-escaping set $K(F){\kern-1pt}={\kern-1pt}\{z\in U: F^{n}(z){\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} U \text { for all } n{\kern-1pt}\ge{\kern-1pt} 1\}$ (called the filled Julia set of the polynomial-like map F) is connected. The map $F:U\to V$ is then a renormalization of $f_c$ and the set $K(F)$ is a ‘small’ (filled) Julia set of $f_c$ . By the theory of polynomial-like mappings [Reference Douady and Hubbard5], there is a quasiconformal homeomorphism of $\mathbb {C}$ , which is conformal on $K(F)$ , that conjugates F on a neighborhood of $K(F)$ to another uniquely defined quadratic polynomial $f_{c'}$ with connected filled Julia set. If $f_{c'}$ is renormalizable by itself, then $f_c$ is called twice renormalizable, etc. If $f_c$ admits infinitely many renormalizations, it is called infinitely renormalizable. The renormalization $F=f^p_c$ is simple if any two sets $f^i(K(f))$ , $f^j(K(F))$ , $0\le i<j\le p-1$ , are either disjoint or intersect each other at a unique point which does not separate either of them. A simple renormalization $f^{p_n}$ is called primitive if all sets $f^i(K_n)$ , $i=0,\ldots , p_n-1$ , are disjoints and satellite otherwise.

To state our main result, Theorem 1.1, let $f(z)=z^2+c$ be infinitely renormalizable. Then its Julia set $J=J(f)$ coincides with the filled Julia set $K(f)$ and is a nowhere dense compact full connected subset of $\mathbb {C}$ . Let $1=p_0<p_1<\cdots <p_n<\cdots $ be the sequence of consecutive periods of simple renormalizations of f and $J_n\ni 0$ denote the ‘small’ Julia set of the n-renormalization (where $J_0=J$ ). Then $p_{n+1}/p_n$ is an integer, $f^{p_n}(J_n)=J_n$ , for any n, and f-orbits of $J_n$ ,

$$ \begin{align*} \mathrm{orb}(J_n)=\bigcup_{j\ge 0}f^j(J_n)=\bigcup_{j=0}^{p_n-1}f^j(J_n),\end{align*} $$

$n=0,1,\ldots ,$ form a strictly decreasing sequence of compact subsets of $\mathbb {C}$ . Let

$$ \begin{align*}J_\infty=\bigcap_{n\ge 0}\mathrm{orb}(J_n)\end{align*} $$

be the intersection of the orbits of the ‘small’ Julia sets $J_n$ . For every n, repelling periodic orbits of f are dense in $\mathrm {orb}(J_n)$ , while each component of $J_\infty $ is wandering. In particular, $J_\infty $ contains no periodic points of f.

Let

$$ \begin{align*}P=\overline{\{f^n(0)| n=1,2,\ldots\}}\end{align*} $$

be the postcritical set of f. Clearly,

$$ \begin{align*}P\subset J_\infty.\end{align*} $$

Moreover, the critical point $0$ is recurrent, hence,

$$ \begin{align*}P=\omega(0),\end{align*} $$

where $\omega (z)$ is the omega-limit set of a point $z\in J$ .

We prove in [Reference Levin and Przytycki12] that $J_\infty $ cannot contain any hyperbolic set. On the other hand, a hyperbolic set of a rational map always carries an invariant measure with a positive Lyapunov exponent. So a generalization of [Reference Levin and Przytycki12] would be that $J_\infty $ never carries such a measure. Here we prove this generalization for a class of ‘satellite’ infinitely renormalizable quadratic polynomials.

Theorem 1.1. Suppose that $f(z)=z^2+c$ admits infinitely many satellite renormalizations. Then $f: J_\infty \to J_\infty $ has no invariant probability measure with positive Lyapunov exponent.

Remark 1.1. Conjecturally, the same conclusion should hold for any infinitely renormalizable $f(z)=z^2+c$ . One can show this assuming that the Julia set of f is locally connected (for example, this is the case if f admits complex bounds). Indeed, if $f:J_\infty \to J_\infty $ had an invariant probability measure with positive Lyapunov exponent, then, taking a typical point of this measure and repeating the proof of [Reference Levin, Przytycki and Shen13, Corollary 5.5], we would conclude that the Julia set of f is not locally connected (in fact, $J_\infty $ contains a non-trivial continuum). Thus the only open case remains when f has only finitely many satellite renormalizations and $J_\infty $ contains a non-trivial continuum.

Remark 1.2. For every rational map $f:\mathbb {C}\to \mathbb {C}$ (in particular, quadratic polynomial) and every invariant probability measure supported on the Julia set of f, the Lyapunov exponent is non-negative: see [Reference Przytycki22] (compare a remark preceding Corollary 1.3). On the other hand, if f is hyperbolic or non-uniformly hyperbolic (topologically Collet–Eckmann), Lyapunov exponents for all invariant probability measures supported on the Julia set are positive and bounded away from $0$ ; see [Reference Przytycki24].

Let us comment on the behavior of the restriction map $f: J_\infty \to J_\infty $ where f as in Theorem 1.1. First, by [Reference Levin and Przytycki12], the postcritical set P must intersect the omega-limit set $\omega (x)$ of each $x\in J_\infty $ . At the same time, the dynamics and topology of the further restriction ${f: P\to P}$ can vary. Indeed, there are infinitely renormalizable quadratic polynomials f with all renormalizations being of satellite type such that at least one of the following statements holds. (A more complete description of $f:P\to P$ should follow from the methods developed in [Reference Cheraghi and Pedramfar3].)

(1) $f:P\to P$ is not minimal. This case occurs in Douady–Hubbard type examples. Indeed, by the basic construction [Reference Milnor18], $J_\infty $ then contains a closed invariant set X (which is the limit set for the collection of $\alpha $ -fixed points of renormalizations) such that $0\notin X$ . By [Reference Levin and Przytycki12], $X\cap P$ is non-empty. Thus $X\cap P$ is an invariant non-empty proper compact subset of P.

(2) P is a so-called ‘hairy’ Cantor set; in particular, P contains uncountably many non-trivial continua. This case occurs following [Reference Cheraghi and Pedramfar3].

(3) P is a Cantor set and $f:P\to P$ is minimal; this happens whenever f either admits complex bounds (which then imply $J_\infty =P$ ) or is robust [Reference McMullen16]. (The ‘robustness’ can happen without ‘complex bounds’, which follows from [Reference Cheraghi and Pedramfar3] combined with [Reference Blokh, Levin, Oversteegen and Timorin1].) Under either of the two conditions, $f: P\to P$ is a minimal homeomorphism, which is topologically conjugate to $x\mapsto x+1$ acting on the projective limit of the sequence of groups $\{\mathbb {Z}/p_n\mathbb {Z}\}_{n=1}^\infty $ ; in particular, $f:P\to P$ (hence, also $f:J_\infty \to J_\infty $ , which follows from Corollary 1.3) is uniquely ergodic in this case.

Theorem 1.1 yields the following dichotomy about the measurable dynamics of $f: J \to J$ on the Julia set J of f. Recall that, by [Reference Przytycki22], any invariant probability measure on the Julia set of a rational function has non-negative exponents.

Corollary 1.3. Let $\mu $ be an invariant probability ergodic measure of $f: J\to J$ . Then either

  1. (i) $\operatorname {\mathrm {supp}}(\mu )\cap J_\infty =\emptyset $ and its Lyapunov exponent $\chi (\mu )>0$ , or

  2. (ii) $\operatorname {\mathrm {supp}}(\mu )\subset P$ and $\chi (\mu )=0$ .

In particular, the set $J_\infty \setminus P$ is ‘measure invisible’ (see also Proposition 6.1 which is a somewhat stronger version of Corollary 1.3).

Corollary 1.4. If f admits infinitely many satellite renormalizations, then

(1.1) $$ \begin{align} \limsup_{n\to \infty} \frac{1}{n}\log|(f^n)'(x)|\le 0 \quad\text{for any } x\in J_\infty, \end{align} $$

and

(1.2) $$ \begin{align} \lim_{n\to \infty} \frac{1}{n}\log|(f^n)'(c)|=0. \end{align} $$

For the proof of Corollaries 1.31.4, see §6. The proof of Theorem 1.1 occupies §§25.

As in [Reference Levin and Przytycki12], we make heavy use of a general result of [Reference Przytycki23] on the accessibility, although the main idea of the proof is different. Indeed, in [Reference Levin and Przytycki12] we utilize the fact that the map cannot be one-to-one on an infinite hyperbolic set. In the present paper, to prove Theorem 1.1 we assign, loosely speaking, an external ray to a typical point of a hypothetical measure with positive exponent such that the family of such rays is invariant and has a controlled geometry. Given a satellite renormalization $f^{p_n}$ , we use the measure and the above family of rays to choose a point x and build a special domain that covers a ‘small’ Julia set $J_{n,x}\ni x$ such that there is a univalent pullback of the domain by $f^{p_n}$ along the renormalization that enters into itself, leading to a contradiction. The choice of x is ‘probabilistic’, that is, made from sets of positive measure, and the construction of the domain differs substantially depending on whether all satellite renormalizations of f are doubling or not.

2. Preliminaries

Here we collect, for further reference and use throughout the paper, necessary notation and general facts. Statements (A)–(D) below are slightly adapted versions of (A)–(D) in [Reference Levin and Przytycki12] which are either well known [Reference McMullen16, Reference Milnor19] or proved here.

Let $f(z)=z^2+c$ be infinitely renormalizable. We retain the notation of the Introduction.

(A) Let G be the Green function of the basin of infinity $A(\infty )=\{z| f^n(z)\to \infty , {n\to \infty }\}$ of f with the standard normalization at infinity $G(z)=\ln |z|+O(1/|z|)$ . The external ray $R_t$ of the argument $t\in \mathbf {S}^1=\mathbb {R}/\mathbb {Z}$ is a gradient line to the level sets of G that has the (asymptotic) argument t at $\infty $ . $G(z)$ is called the (Green) level of $z\in A(\infty )$ and the unique t such that $z\in R_t$ is called the (external) argument (or angle) of z. A point $z\in J(f)$ is accessible if there is an external ray $R_t$ which lands at (that is, converges to) z. Then t is called an (external) argument (angle) of z.

Let $\sigma : \mathbf {S}^1\to \mathbf {S}^1$ be the doubling map $\sigma (t)=2t(\mathrm {mod}\ 1)$ . Then $f(R_t)=R_{\sigma (t)}$ .

Every point a of a repelling cycle $O_a$ of period p is the landing point of an equal number $v, 1\le v<\infty $ , of external rays where v coincides with the number of connected components of $J(f)\setminus \{a\}$ . Their arguments are permuted by $\sigma ^p$ according to a rational rotation number $r/q$ (written in lowest terms); $v/q$ is the number of cycles of rays landing at a. If $v/q\ge 2$ , there is an alternative [Reference Milnor19]: if $r/q=0/1$ , then $v=2$ so that each of two external rays landing at a is fixed by $f^p$ ; if $r/q\neq 0/1$ , that is, $q\ge 2$ , then $v=q$ , that is, the arguments of q rays landing at a form a single cycle of $\sigma ^p$ .

(B) All periodic points of f are repelling. Given a small Julia set $J_n$ containing $0$ , the sets $f^j(J_n)$ , $0\le j< p_n$ , are called small Julia sets of level n. Each $f^j(J_n)$ contains $p_{n+1}/p_n\ge 2$ small Julia sets of level $n+1$ . We have $J_n=-J_n$ . Since all renormalizations are simple, for $j\neq 0$ , the symmetric companion $-f^j(J_n)$ of $f^j(J_n)$ can intersect the orbit $\mathrm {orb}(J_n)=\bigcup _{j=0}^{p_n-1}f^j(J_n)$ of $J_n$ only at a single point which is periodic. On the other hand, since only finitely many external rays converge to each periodic point of f, the set $J_\infty $ contains no periodic points. In particular, each component K of $J_\infty $ is wandering, that is, $f^i(K)\cap f^j(K)=\emptyset $ for all $0\le i<j<\infty $ . All this implies that $\{x,-x\}\subset J_\infty $ if and only if $x\in K_0:=\bigcap _{n=1}^\infty J_n$ .

Given $x\in J_\infty $ , for every n, let $j_n(x)$ be the unique $j\in \{0,1,\ldots , p_n-1\}$ such that $x\in f^{j_n(x)}(J_n)$ . Let $J_{n,x}=f^{j_n(x)}(J_n)$ be a small Julia set of level n containing x and $K_x=\bigcap _{n\ge 0}J_{n,x}$ , a component of $J_\infty $ containing x.

In particular, $K_0=\bigcap _{n\ge 0}J_n$ is the component of $J_\infty $ containing $0$ and $K_c=\bigcap _{n=1}^\infty f(J_n)$ , the component containing c.

Note that either $p_n-j_n(x)\to \infty $ as $n\to \infty $ or $p_n-j_n(x)=N$ for some $N\ge 0$ and all n, that is, $f^N(x)\in K_0$ . This is so since the sequence of the sets $J_n$ is non-increasing, hence $J_{n,x}$ is non-increasing, hence $p_n-j_n(x)$ (the time to reach $J_n$ ) is non-decreasing.

The map $f:K_x\to K_{f(x)}$ is two-to-one if $x=0$ and one-to-one otherwise. Moreover, for every $y\in J_\infty $ , $f^{-1}(y)\cap J_\infty $ consists of two points if $y\in K_c$ and consists of a single point otherwise. Denote

$$ \begin{align*}J_\infty'=J_\infty\setminus\bigcup_{j=-\infty}^\infty f^j(K_0). \end{align*} $$

We conclude that $f: J_\infty '\to J_\infty '$ is a homeomorphism. Given $x\in J_\infty '$ and $m>0$ , denote $x_m=f^m(x)$ and

$$ \begin{align*}x_{-m}=f|_{J_\infty'}^{-m}(x),\end{align*} $$

that is, the only point $f^{-m}(x)\cap J_\infty $ .

(C) Given $n\ge 0$ , the map $f^{p_n}:f(J_n)\to f(J_n)$ has two fixed points: the separating fixed point $\alpha _n$ (that is, $f(J_n)\setminus \{\alpha _n\}$ has at least two components) and the non-separating $\beta _n$ (so that $f(J_n)\setminus \beta _n$ has a single component).

For every $n>0$ , there are $0<t_n<\tilde t_n<1$ such that two rays $R_{t_n}$ and $R_{\tilde t_n}$ land at the non-separating fixed point $\beta _n\in f(J_n)$ of $f^{p_n}$ and the component $\Omega _n$ of $\mathbb {C}\setminus {(R_{t_n}\cup R_{\tilde t_n}\cup \beta _n)}$ which does not contain $0$ has two characteristic properties [Reference Milnor19]:

(i) $\Omega _n$ contains c and is disjoint with the forward orbit of $\beta _n$ .

(ii) For every $1\le j<p_n$ , consider arguments (angles) of external rays which land at $f^{j-1}(\beta _n)$ . The angles split $\mathbf {S}^1$ into finitely many arcs. Then the length of any such arc is bigger than the length of the arc

$$ \begin{align*}S_{n,1}=[t_n, \tilde t_n]=\{t: R_t\subset \Omega_n\}.\end{align*} $$

Denote

$$ \begin{align*}t_n'=t_n+\frac{\tilde t_n-t_n}{2^{p_n}}, \quad \tilde t_n'=\tilde t_n-\frac{\tilde t_n-t_n}{2^{p_n}}.\end{align*} $$

The rays $R_{t_n'}$ , $R_{\tilde t_n'}$ land at a common point $\beta _n'\in f^{-p_n}(\beta _n)\cap \Omega _n$ . Introduce an (unbounded) domain $U_n$ with boundary consisting of two curves $R_{t_n}\cup R_{\tilde t_n}\cup \beta _n$ and $R_{t_n'}\cup R_{\tilde t_n'}\cup \beta _n'$ . Then $c\in U_n$ and $f^{p_n}: U_n\to \Omega _n$ is a two-to-one branched covering. Also,

$$ \begin{align*} f(J_n)=\{z: f^{kp_n}(z)\in \overline U_n, G(f^{kp_n}(z))< 10, k=0,1,\ldots\}. \end{align*} $$

Let

$$ \begin{align*}s_{n,1}=[t_n, t_n']\cup [\tilde t_n', \tilde t_n]\end{align*} $$

so that $s_{n,1}\subset S_{n,1}$ and the argument of any ray to $f(J_n)$ lies in $s_{n,1}$ .

Let us iterate this construction. Given $1\le j\le p_n$ , let $S_{n,j}$ be one of the two arcs of $\mathbf {S}^1$ with end points

$$ \begin{align*}t_{n,j}=\sigma^{j-1}(t_n), \tilde t_{n,j}=\sigma^{j-1}(\tilde t_n)\end{align*} $$

such that arguments of any ray to $f^{j}(J_n)$ lies in $S_{n,j}$ . Let

$$ \begin{align*}s_{n,j}=\sigma^{j-1}(s_{n,1})=[t_{n,j}, t_{n,j}']\cup [\tilde t_{n,j}', \tilde t_{n,j}].\end{align*} $$

where $t_{n,j}'=\sigma ^{j-1}(t_n'), \tilde t_{n,j}'=\sigma ^{j-1}(\tilde t_n')$ . Then

$$ \begin{align*}s_{n,j}\subset S_{n,j}\end{align*} $$

and the argument of any ray to $f^j(J_n)$ lies in fact in $s_{n,j}$ . Note that

(2.1) $$ \begin{align} t_{n,j}'-t_{n,j}=\tilde t_{n,j}-\tilde t_{n,j}'=\frac{\tilde t_n-t_n}{2^{p_n-j+1}}<\tilde t_n-t_n<1/2. \end{align} $$

So $\sigma ^{j-1}: s_{n,1}\to s_{n,j}$ is a homeomorphism and $s_{n,j}$ has two components (‘windows’) $[t_{n,j}, t_{n,j}']$ and $[\tilde t_{n,j}', \tilde t_{n,j}]$ of equal length.

Let $U_{n,j}=f^{j-1}(U_n)$ and $\beta _{n,j}=f^{j-1}(\beta _n)$ . The domain $U_{n,j}$ is bounded by two rays $R_{t_{n,j}}\cup R_{\tilde t_{n,j}}$ converging to $\beta _{n,j}$ and completed by $\beta _{n,j}$ along with two rays $R_{t_{n,j}'}\cup R_{\tilde t_{n,j}'}$ completed by their common limit point $f^{j-1}(\beta _n')$ where $t_{n,j}'=\sigma ^{j-1}(t_n'), \tilde t_{n,j}'=\sigma ^{j-1}(\tilde t_n')$ .

By (i) and (ii), for a fixed n, the domains $U_{n,j}$ , $1\le j\le p_n$ , are pairwise disjoint.

Let $U_{n,j-p_n}$ be a component of $f^{-(p_n-j)}(U_n)$ which is contained in $U_{n,j}$ . Then

(2.2) $$ \begin{align} f^{p_n}: U_{n,j-p_n}\to U_{n,j} \end{align} $$

is a two-to-one branched covering and

$$ \begin{align*}f^{j-1}(J_n)=\{z: f^{kp_n}(z)\in \overline U_{n, j-p_n}, G(f^{kp_n}(z))<10, k=0,1,\ldots\}.\end{align*} $$

Let $s^1_{n,j}$ be the set of arguments of rays entering $U_{n,j-p_n}$ . Then $s^1_{n,j}$ consists of four components so that the $\sigma ^{p_n}$ map each of these components homeomorphically onto one of the ‘windows’ of $s_{n,j}$ .

Furthermore, let

$$ \begin{align*}\Omega_{n,j}=f^{j-1}(\Omega_n).\end{align*} $$

Unlike the map (2.2), the map

(2.3) $$ \begin{align} f^{p_n}: U_{n,j}\to \Omega_{n,j} \end{align} $$

is a two-to-one branched covering only assuming $f^{j-1}: \Omega _{n}\to \Omega _{n,j}$ is a homeomorphism, which holds if and only if $\sigma ^{j-1}: S_{n,1}\to \sigma ^{j-1}(S_{n,1})$ is a homeomorphism. In the latter case,

$$ \begin{align*}\sigma^{j-1}(S_{n,1})=S_{n,j}.\end{align*} $$

Primitive versus satellite renormalizations. Let $n\ge 2$ and $r_n/q_n$ be the rotation number of $\beta _n$ . The next claim is well known; we include the proof for the reader’s convenience.

Lemma 2.1.

  1. (1) The renormalization $f^{p_n}$ is primitive if and only if $r_n/q_n=0/1$ , the period of $\beta _n$ is $p_n$ and $\beta _n$ is the landing point of exactly two rays and they are fixed by $f^{p_n}$ .

  2. (2) The points $\beta _n$ , $n=1,2,\ldots ,$ are all different.

  3. (3) $f^{p_n}$ is satellite if and only if the $\alpha $ -fixed point $\alpha _{n-1}$ of $f^{p_{n-1}}: f(J_{n-1})\to f(J_{n-1})$ coincides with the $\beta $ -fixed point $\beta _n$ of $f^{p_n}:f(J_n)\to f(J_n)$ . In particular, $\bigcup _{j=0}^{q_n-1} f^{jp_{n-1}}(f(J_n))\subset f(J_{n-1})$ and $p_n=q_n p_{n-1}$ . Moreover, each of the $p_{n-1}$ points of the orbit of $\beta _n$ is the landing point of precisely $q_n$ rays which are permuted by $f^{p_{n-1}}$ according to the rotation number $r_n/q_n$ . Completed by the landing point, they split $\mathbb {C}$ into $q_n$ ‘sectors’ such that the closure of each of them contains a unique ‘small’ Julia set of level n sharing a common point with the boundary of the ‘sector’.

Proof. (1) $f^{p_n}$ is satellite if and only if $f(J_n)$ meets at $\beta _n$ some other iterate of $J_n$ , hence, $r_n/q_n\neq 0$ , and vice versa.

(2) Assume $\beta :=\beta _n=\beta _m$ for some $0\le n<m$ . As $p_n<p_m$ , the period of $\beta _m$ is smaller than $p_n$ . It follows that $f(J_n)$ contains two small Julia sets of level m that meet at $\beta $ , hence, $\beta $ separates $f(J_n)$ , a contradiction as $\beta _n$ does not.

(3) By (1), $f^{p_n}$ is satellite if and only if $r_n/q_n\neq 0$ . Let $\tilde p_{n-1}=p_n/q_n$ . Then $\tilde p_{n-1}$ is an integer and is equal to the period of $\beta _n$ . It follows that the $p_n$ sets $f(J_n), f^2(J_n), \ldots , f^{p_n}(J_n)$ are split into $\tilde p_{n-1}$ connected closed subsets $E_i$ , $i{\kern-1pt}={\kern-1pt}1,\ldots , \tilde { \tilde {p}}_{n-1}$ where $E_1{\kern-1pt}={\kern-1pt}\bigcup _{j=0}^{q_n-1} f^{j \tilde p_{n-1}}(f(J_n))$ and $E_i{\kern-1pt}={\kern-1pt}f^{i-1}(E_1)$ , $i=1,2,\ldots , \tilde p_{n-1}$ . Moreover, $0{\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} E_{p_{n-1}}$ and $f(E_i){\kern-1pt}={\kern-1pt}E_{i+1}$ , $i{\kern-1pt}={\kern-1pt}1,\ldots ,\tilde p_{n-1}{\kern-1pt}-{\kern-1pt}1$ , $f(E_{\tilde p_{n-1}}){\kern-1pt}={\kern-1pt}E_1$ . By [Reference McMullen16, Theorem 8.5], $f^{\tilde p_{n-1}}$ is a simple renormalization and the $E_i$ , $i=1,\ldots , \tilde p_{n-1}$ , are subsets of its $\tilde p_{n-1}$ small Julia sets. Since $1=p_0<p_1<\cdots $ are all consecutive periods of simple renormalizations, then $\tilde p_{n-1}=p_k$ for some $k<n$ . Therefore, the $\beta _n$ -fixed point of $f^{p_n}:f(J_n)\to f(J_n)$ is $\alpha _k$ -fixed point of $f^{p_k}: f(J_{p_k})\to f(J_{p_k})$ . As all renormalizations are simple, if $k<n-1$ then that would imply that $\beta _n=\beta _{n-1}=\cdots =\beta _{k+1}$ , a contradiction with (2). The claim about ‘sectors’ follows since each map $f^j$ is one-to-one in a neighborhood of $\beta _n$ and the closure of $\Omega _n$ contains a single ‘small’ Julia set $f(J_n)$ of level n sharing a common point with $\partial \Omega _n$ .

We need a more refined estimate provided the renormalization is not doubling. Assume $f^{p_n}$ is satellite so that $p_{n-1}=p_n/q_n$ , with $q_n\ge 2$ , and the rotation number of $\beta _n$ is $r_n/q_n\neq 0/1$ .

Lemma 2.2. Assume $f^{p_n}$ is satellite and $q_n=p_n/p_{n-1}\ge 3$ , that is, $f^{p_n}$ is not doubling. Then

(2.4) $$ \begin{align} \sigma^{j-1}: S_{n,1}\to\sigma^{j-1}S_{n,1} \quad\text{is a homeomorphism for } j=1,\ldots, p_{n-1}(q_n-2). \end{align} $$

In particular, given $\zeta \in (0,1/3)$ , the length of $\sigma ^{j-1}S_{n,1}$ tends to zero as $n\to \infty $ uniformly in $j=1,\ldots , [\zeta p_n]$ (where $[x]$ is the integer part of $x\in \mathbb {R}$ ).

Moreover, for every $1\le j\le p_{n-1}(q_n-2)$ , $S_{n,j}=\sigma ^{j-1}(S_{n,1})$ and the map $f^{p_n}: U_{n,j}\to \Omega _{n,j}$ is a two-to-one branched covering such that

$$ \begin{align*}f^{j}(J_n)=\{z: f^{kp_n}(z)\in \overline U_{n, j}, G(f^{kp_n}(z))<10, k=0,1,\ldots\}.\end{align*} $$

Proof. Let $g=f^{p_{n-1}}: U_{n-1}\to \Omega _{n-1}$ . Then g is a two-to-one covering of degree $2$ and the critical value c.

(1) Recall that $s_{n-1,1}=[t_{n-1}, t_{n-1}']\cup [\tilde t_{n-1}', \tilde t_{n-1}]$ consists of two ‘windows’ so that $\sigma ^{p_{n-1}}$ is an orientation-preserving homeomorphism of either ‘window’ onto $S_{n-1,1}=[t_{n-1}, \tilde t_{n-1}]$ .

(2) Consider the $q_n$ rays $L_1,\ldots ,L_{q_n}$ to $\alpha _{n-1}$ . The map g is a local homeomorphism near $\alpha _{n-1}$ which permutes the rays to $\alpha _{n-1}$ according to the rotation number $\nu :=r_n/q_n\neq 0, 1/2$ . In particular, g maps any pair of adjacent rays to $\alpha _{n-1}$ onto another pair of adjacent rays to $\alpha _{n-1}$ (see Figure 1).

(3) Not all arguments of these rays lie in a single ‘window’ I of $s_{n-1,1}$ because otherwise, by (1), the set of those arguments would lie in the non-escaping set of an orientation-preserving homeomorphism $\sigma ^{p_{n-1}}: I\to S_{n,1}$ , which consists of a fixed point of this map, a contradiction with the fact that $q_n>1$ .

Figure 1 $q_n=3$ .

(4) The rays $L_j$ split $U_{n-1}$ into $q_n$ disjoint domains $U^j$ , $j=0,1,\ldots ,q_n-1$ . By the ‘ideal boundary’ $\hat \partial {U^j}$ of $U^j$ we will mean the usual (topological) boundary $\partial U^j$ (in our case, the set of boundary rays completed by their landing points) along with the ‘boundary at infinity’ which is the set of arguments of rays entering $U^j$ . Then define $\hat g$ on $\hat \partial {U^j}$ to be g on $\partial U^j$ and $\sigma ^{p_{n-1}}$ on the ‘boundary at infinity’ of $U^j$ .

(5) By (3), one of the $U^j$ , called $U^0$ , has $\beta _{n-1}$ in its boundary, and another one, called $U^{q_n-1}$ , has $\beta _{n-1}'$ in its boundary. In particular, the boundary of any other $U^j$ , $j{\kern-1pt}\neq{\kern-1pt} 0, q_n{\kern-1pt}-{\kern-1pt}1$ , consists of a pair of adjacent rays to $\alpha _{n-1}$ whose arguments belong to a single ‘window’ of $s_{n-1,1}$ . Therefore, by (1), the rest of the indices $j=1,\ldots , q_n-2$ can be ordered in such a way that $\hat g:\hat \partial {U^j}\to \hat \partial {U^{j+1}}$ is a one-to-one map for $j=1,\ldots ,q_n-3$ (note that the ‘boundary at infinity’ of each $U^j$ , $1\le j\le q_n-2$ , consists of a single ‘arc at infinity’). Therefore, $g: U^j\to U^{j+1}$ is a homeomorphism for $j=1,\ldots , q_n-3$ . The map $\hat g$ on $\hat \partial {U^{q_n-2}}$ is also a one-to-one map on its image $W=g(U^{q_n-2})$ where W is bounded by two adjacent rays to $\alpha _{n-1}$ . W cannot contain $U^0$ because otherwise W would contain $\beta _{n-1}'$ , a contradiction. Thus W must contain $\beta _{n-1}'$ . That is, $g(U^{q_n-2})$ covers $U^{q_n-1}$ .

Thus, for $j{\kern-1pt}={\kern-1pt}1,\ldots ,q_n{\kern-1pt}-{\kern-1pt}3$ , $g: U^j{\kern-1pt}\to{\kern-1pt} U^{j+1}$ is a homeomorphism, and ${g: U^{q_n-2}{\kern-1pt}\to{\kern-1pt} W}$ is also a homeomorphism where the image $W=g(U^{q_n-2})$ covers $U^{q_n-1}$ and has two common rays with the boundary of $U^{q_n-1}$ .

(6) The critical value c of g has a unique preimage by g (the critical point of g). As $c\in \Omega _n\subset \Omega _{n-1}$ and $\Omega _n$ is bounded by two adjacent rays to $\alpha _{n-1}$ , $c\in U^i$ for some $i\in \{1,\ldots ,q_n-1\}$ . If $i>1$ , then $i-1\ge 1$ while g would not be a homeomorphism of $U^{i-1}$ on its image. This shows that $c\in U^1=\Omega _n$ .

Concluding, $U^j=g^{j-1}(\Omega _n)$ , $j=1,\ldots ,q_n-2$ , in particular,

$$ \begin{align*}\Omega_n, g(\Omega_n),\ldots, g^{q_n-3}(\Omega_n)\subset U_{n-1}\end{align*} $$

and $g^{q_n-2}:\Omega _n\to g^{q_n-2}(\Omega _n)$ is a homeomorphism, that is, (2.4) holds. It implies the rest.

(D) Given a compact set $Y\subset J(f)$ denote by $(\tilde Y)_f$ (or simply $\tilde Y$ , if the map is fixed) the set of arguments of the external rays which have their limit sets contained in Y. It follows from (C) that $\tilde K_c=\bigcap _{n=1}^\infty \{ [t_n, t_n']\cup [\tilde t_n', \tilde t_n]\}$ , that is, it is either a single-point set or a two-point set.

Since $\tilde K_c$ contains at most two angles, $K_c$ contains at most two different accessible points. More generally, given $x\in J^{\prime }_\infty $ , let

$$ \begin{align*}s_{n,j_n(x)}=[t_{n,j_n(x)}, t_{n,j_n(x)}']\cup [\tilde t_{n,j_n(x)}', \tilde t_{n,j_n(x)}].\end{align*} $$

Then $s_{n+1,j_{n+1}(x)}\subset s_{n,j_{n}(x)}$ so that

$$ \begin{align*}s_{\infty, x}:=\bigcap_{n>0}s_{n,j_n(x)}\end{align*} $$

is not empty and consists of either one or two components. Since $p_n-j_n(x)\to \infty $ for $x\in J^{\prime }_\infty $ we conclude using (2.1), that $s_{\infty , x}$ consists of either a single point or two different points. In particular, for any component K of $J_\infty $ which is not one of $f^{-j}(K_0)$ , $j\ge 0$ , there are either one or two rays tending to K.

From now on, $\mu $ is an f-invariant probability ergodic measure supported in $J_\infty $ : $\operatorname {\mathrm {supp}} \mu \subset J_\infty $ , and having a positive Lyapunov exponent

$$ \begin{align*}\chi(\mu):=\int\log|f'|\, d\mu>0.\end{align*} $$

(E). We start with the following basic statement. Parts (i)–(ii) are easy consequences of the invariance of $\mu $ and (B), while (iii) is a part of Pesin’s theory as in [Reference Przytycki and Urbański25, Theorem 11.2.3] coupled with the structure of $f:J_\infty \to J_\infty $ (see (B)). Recall that $J_\infty '=J_\infty \setminus \bigcup _{j=-\infty }^{\infty } f^j(K_0)$ .

Proposition 2.3.

  1. (i) For every n and $0\le j<p_n$ , $\mu (f^j(J_n))=1/p_n$ .

  2. (ii) $\mu $ has no atoms and $\mu (K)=0$ for every component K of $J_\infty $ .

  3. (iii) $\mu (J_\infty ')=1$ and $f: J_\infty '\to J_\infty '$ is a $\mu $ -measure preserving homeomorphism.

There exists a measurable positive function $\tilde r(x)>0$ on $J_\infty '$ such that for $\mu $ -almost every $x\in J_\infty '$ , and all $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , if $x_{-n}$ is the unique point of $J_\infty '$ with $f^n(x_{-n})=x$ , then a (univalent) branch $g_n: B(x, \tilde r(x))\to \mathbb {C}$ of $f^{-n}$ is well defined such that $g_n(x)=x_{-n}$ ,

Remark 2.4. The branch $g_n$ of $f^{-n}$ depends on n and $x_{-n}$ but it should be clear from the context which points x and $x_{-n}$ are meant.

Using Birkhoff’s ergodic theorem and Egorov’s theorem, Proposition 2.3 immediately implies ( $\mathrm {e}_1$ )–( $\mathrm {e}_3$ ) of the next corollary. The proof of ( $\mathrm {e}_4$ )–( $\mathrm {e}_5$ ) is given immediately after the result.

Corollary 2.5. For every $\epsilon>0$ , there exist a closed set $E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}\subset J_\infty '$ and constants $\rho =\rho (\epsilon )>0$ , $\kappa =\kappa (\epsilon )\in (0,1)$ such that the following statements hold.

  1. (e1) $\mu (E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2})>1-{\epsilon }/{2}$ .

  2. (e2) There exists another closed set $\hat E_{\epsilon /2}$ such that $E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}\subset \hat E_{\epsilon /2}\subset J^{\prime }_\infty $ as follows. For every $x{\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} \hat E_{\epsilon /2}$ and every $m{\kern-1pt}>{\kern-1pt}0$ there exists a (univalent) branch $g_m{\kern-1pt}:{\kern-1pt} B(x, 3\rho ){\kern-1pt}\to{\kern-1pt} \mathbb {C}$ of $f^{-m}$ such that $g_m(x)=x_{-m}$ and $|g^{\prime }_m(x_1)/g^{\prime }_m(x_2)|<2$ , for every $x_1, x_2\in B(x,2\rho )$ . Moreover, $m^{-1}\ln |g^{\prime }_m(x)|\to -\chi (\mu )$ as $m\to \infty $ uniformly in $x\in E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ .

  3. (e3) For every $x\in E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ there exists a sequence of positive integers $n_j=n_j(x)$ , $j=1,2,\ldots ,$ such that $j/n_j\ge \kappa $ and $f^{n_j}(x)\in \hat E_{\epsilon /2}$ for all j.

  4. (e4) Given $x\in J_\infty $ and $n\ge 0$ , let $j_n(x)$ be the unique $1\le j< p_n$ such that $x\in f^j(J_n)$ . Then $p_n-j_n(x)\to \infty $ as $n\to \infty $ uniformly in $x\in E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ .

  5. (e5) For $s_{n,j_n(x)}=[t_{n,j_n(x)}, t_{n,j_n(x)}']\cup [\tilde t_{n,j_n(x)}', \tilde t_{n,j_n(x)}]$ , we have $s_{n+1,j_{n+1}(x)}\subset s_{n,j_{n}(x)}$ and

    $$ \begin{align*}|t_{n,j_n(x)}-t_{n,j_n(x)}'|=|\tilde t_{n,j_n(x)}'-\tilde t_{n,j_n(x)}|\to 0\end{align*} $$
    as $n\to \infty $ uniformly in $x\in E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ .

Proof of ( $\mathrm {e}_4$ )–( $\mathrm {e}_5$ ). Assuming the contrary in ( $\mathrm {e}_4$ ), we find some N and sequences $(n_k){\kern-1pt}\subset{\kern-1pt} \mathbb {N}$ and $(x_k)$ , $x_k{\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ , such that $p_{n_k}{\kern-1pt}-{\kern-1pt}j_{n_k}(x_k){\kern-1pt}={\kern-1pt}N$ (see (B)), hence $x_k{\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} f^{-N}(J_{n_k})$ , for all k. Since $E_{\epsilon /2}$ is closed, one can assume $x_k\to x\in E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}\subset J^{\prime }_\infty $ . Hence, $x\in f^{-N}(K_0)$ , a contradiction. Now for ( $\mathrm {e}_5$ ), using ( $\mathrm {e}_4$ ), $t_{n,j_n(x)}' - t_{n,j_n(x)} = \tilde t_{n,j_n(x)} - \tilde t_{n,j_n(x)}'<{1}/{2^{p_{n}-j_n(x)}}\to 0$ uniformly in x.

3. External rays to typical points

We define a telescope essentially following [Reference Przytycki23]. Given $x\in J(f)$ , $r>0$ , $\delta>0$ , $k\in \mathbb {N}$ and $\kappa {\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} (0,1)$ , an $(r, \kappa , \delta , k)$ -telescope at $x\in J$ is a collection of times $0{\kern-1pt}={\kern-1pt}n_0{\kern-1pt}<{\kern-1pt}n_1{\kern-1pt}<{\kern-1pt}\cdots {\kern-1pt}<{\kern-1pt}n_k$ and disks $B_l=B(f^{n_l}(x), r)$ , $l=0,1,\ldots ,k$ , such that, for every $l>0$ : (i) $l/n_l>\kappa $ ; (ii) there is a univalent branch $g_{n_l}: B(f^{n_l}(x), 2r)\to \mathbb {C}$ of $f^{-n_l}$ so that $g_{n_l}(f^{n_l}(x))=x$ and, for $l=1,\ldots ,k$ , $d(f^{n_{l-1}}\circ g_{n_l}(B_l), \partial B_{l-1})>\delta $ (clearly, here $f^{n_{l-1}}\circ g_{n_l}$ is a branch of $f^{-(n_l-n_{l-1})}$ that maps $f^{n_l}(x)$ to $f^{n_{l-1}}(x)$ ). The trace of the telescope is a collection of sets $B_{l,0}=g_{n_l}(B_l)$ , $l=0,1,\ldots ,k$ . We have $B_{k,0}\subset B_{k-1,0}\subset \cdots \subset B_{1,0}\subset B_{0,0}=B_0=B(x,r)$ .

By the first point of intersection of a ray $R_t$ , or an arc of $R_t$ , with a set E we mean a point of $R_t\cap E$ with the minimal level (if it exists).

Theorem 3.1. [Reference Przytycki23]

Given $r{\kern-1pt}>{\kern-1pt}0$ , $\kappa {\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} (0,1)$ , $\delta{\kern-1pt}>{\kern-1pt}0$ and $C{\kern-1pt}>{\kern-1pt}0$ , there exist $M{\kern-1pt}>{\kern-1pt}0$ , $\tilde l,\tilde k\in \mathbb {N}$ and $K>1$ such that for every $(r, \kappa , \delta , k)$ -telescope the following statements hold. Let $k>\tilde k$ . Let $u_0=u$ be any point at the boundary of $B_k$ such that $G(u)\ge C$ . Then there are indexes $1\le l_1<l_2<\cdots <l_j=k$ such that $l_1<\tilde l$ , $l_{i+1}<K l_i$ , $i=1,\ldots ,j-1$ , as follows. Let $u_k=g_{n_k}(u)\in \partial B_{k,0}$ and let $\gamma _k$ be an infinite arc of an external ray through $u_k$ between the point $u_k$ and $\infty $ . Let $u_{k,k}=u_k$ and, for $l=1,\ldots ,k-1$ , let $u_{k,l}$ be the first point of intersection of $\gamma _k$ with $\partial B_{l,0}$ . Then, for $i=1,\ldots ,j$ ,

$$ \begin{align*}G(u_{k,l_i})>M 2^{-n_{l_i}}.\end{align*} $$

The next proposition, a corollary of Theorem 3.1, is a key one.

Proposition 3.1. Given $\epsilon>0$ , there exists a closed set $E_\epsilon $ as follows. First, $\mu (E_\epsilon )>1-\epsilon $ and $E_\epsilon \subset E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ , where $E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ is the set defined in (E) and satisfies ( $\mathrm {e}_1$ )–( $\mathrm {e}_5$ ). There exists $r=r(\epsilon )>0$ and, for each $\nu>0$ , there is $C(\nu )>0$ as follows.

  1. (1) Let $x\in E_\epsilon $ . Then x is the landing point of an external ray $R_{t(x)}$ of the argument $t(x)$ . Moreover, the first intersection of $R_{t(x)}$ with $\partial B(x,\nu )$ has level at least $C(\nu )$ .

  2. (2) For each n, a branch $g_n: B(x,2r)\to \mathbb {C}$ of $f^{-n}$ is well defined such that $g_n(x)=x_{-n}$ , $|g^{\prime }_n(x_1)/g^{\prime }_n(x_2)|<2$ , for every $x_1, x_2\in B(x,r)$ and $n^{-1}\ln |g^{\prime }_n(x)|\to -\chi (\mu )$ as $m\to \infty $ uniformly in $x\in E_\epsilon $ .

  3. (3) If $x'=g_n(x)\in E_\epsilon $ , then $f^n(R_{t(x')})=R_{t(x)}$ .

Proof. Statements (1)–(2) will hold already for the set $E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ which follows from Theorem 3.1 as in [Reference Przytycki23] and uses only the fact that $\mu $ has a positive exponent; (3) will follow in our case as we shrink the set $E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ a bit since each point $x\in J_\infty '$ admits at most two external arguments.

Here are details. Let $r=\rho (\epsilon )$ and $\kappa =\kappa (\epsilon )$ as in the properties ( $\mathrm {e}_2$ )–( $\mathrm {e}_3$ ) of the set $E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ . Then, by ( $\mathrm {e}_2$ )–( $\mathrm {e}_3$ ), there is $\delta>0$ such that, for each k, every $x\in E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ admits an $(r, \kappa , \delta , k)$ -telescope with the times $0=n_0<n_1<n_2<\cdots <n_k$ that appear in property ( $\mathrm {e}_3$ ) of $E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ . On the other hand, there exists $L_r>0$ such that for every $z\in J(f)$ there is a point $u(z)\in \partial B(z,r)$ with the level $G(u(z))>L_r$ . This is so due to $\bigcup _{L>0}\{G(z)\ge L\}= A_\infty $ . Given this $C=L_r$ , let M, $\tilde l$ and $\tilde k$ be as in Theorem 3.1.

Let $x\in E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ and $n_1<n_2<\cdots <n_k<\cdots $ as in ( $\mathrm {e}_3$ ). Fix $k>\tilde k$ . Let $B_{k,0}(x)\subset B_{k-1,0}(x)\subset \cdots \subset B_{1,0}(x)\subset B_{0,0}(x)$ be the corresponding trace. By Theorem 3.1, there are $1\le l_{1,k}(x)<l_{2,k}(x)<\cdots <l_{j^x_k,k}(x)=k$ such that $l_{1,k}(x)<\tilde l$ , $l_{i+1,k}(x)<K l_{i,k}(x)$ , $i=1,\ldots ,j^x_k-1$ . Let $\gamma _k(x)$ be an arc of an external ray between the point $u_k(x):=g_{n_k}(u(f^{n_k}(x))$ and $\infty $ . Let $u_{k,l}(x)$ be the first intersection of $\gamma _k(x)$ with $\partial B_{l,0}(x)$ . Then, for $i=1,\ldots ,j^x_k-1$ ,

(3.1) $$ \begin{align} G(u_{k,l_{i,k}}(x))>M 2^{-n_{l_{i,k}(x)}}>M 2^{-l_{i,k}(x)/\kappa}. \end{align} $$

For all $i=1,\ldots ,j^x_k-1$ ,

(3.2) $$ \begin{align} i\le l_{i,k}(x)<K^i \tilde l. \end{align} $$

Denote by $t_k(x)$ the argument of an external ray that contains the arc $\gamma _k(x)$ .

Now, given a sequence

(3.3) $$ \begin{align} k_1<k_2<\cdots<k_m<\cdots \end{align} $$

such that $k_1>\tilde k$ , we get a sequence of arguments $t_{k_m}(x)$ and a sequence of arcs $\gamma _{k_m}(x)$ of external rays of the corresponding arguments $t_{k_m}(x)$ . Passing to a subsequence in the sequence $(k_m)$ , if necessary, one can assume that $t_{k_m}(x)\to \tilde t(x)$ , for some argument $\tilde t(x)$ .

Fix any $\nu \in (0,r)$ and choose $\tilde k_0>\tilde k$ such that

$$ \begin{align*}2\exp(-K^{\tilde k_0-2}\tilde l \chi(\mu))<\nu,\end{align*} $$

and let

$$ \begin{align*}C(\nu)=M (2^{-1/\kappa})^{\tilde l K^{\tilde k_0}}.\end{align*} $$

Then, by Theorem 3.1, for each $k_m>k_0$ , the first intersection of the ray $R_{t_{k_m}}(x)$ with the boundary of $B(x,\nu )$ has level at least $C(\nu )$ . It follows, for any $0<C<C(\nu )$ , that the sequence of arcs of the rays $R_{t_{k_m}(x)}$ between the levels C and $C(\nu )$ does not exit $B(x,\nu )$ for all $k_m>k_0$ . As $t_{k_m}(x)\to \tilde t(x)$ , it follows that the arc of the ray $R_{\tilde t(x)}$ between levels C and $C(\nu )$ stays in $B(x,\nu )$ too. As $\nu>0$ and $C\in (0, C(\nu ))$ can be chosen arbitrary small, $R_{\tilde t(x)}$ must land at x and satisfy (1) with $t(x)$ replaced by $\tilde t(x)$ .

Let us call the above procedure of getting $\tilde t(x)$ from the constants r, $L_r$ , the point $x\in E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ , and the sequence (3.3) the $(r, L_r, x, (k_m))$ -procedure.

Note that (2) is property ( $\mathrm {e}_2$ ) of the set $E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ .

In order to satisfy property (3), we shrink the set $E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ and correct $\tilde t(x)$ , changing it to some $t(x)$ (if necessary) as follows. Using Birkhoff’s ergodic theorem and Egorov’s theorem, choose a closed subset $E_\epsilon $ of $E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}$ such that $\mu (E_\epsilon )>1-\epsilon $ and, for each $x\in E_\epsilon $ , the set $\mathcal {N}(x):=\{N\in \mathbb {N}: f^N(x)\in E^{\prime }_{\epsilon /2}\}$ is infinite. Note that $\mathcal {N}(x)\subset \{n_k\}_{k=1}^\infty $ . We have proved that, for each $N\in \mathcal {N}(x)$ , (1) holds for the point $f^N(x)$ instead of x; in particular, $\tilde t(f^N(x))$ is an argument of $f^N(x)$ . On the other hand, by (D), each $y\in E_\epsilon $ admits at most two external arguments, hence, all possible external arguments of the forward orbit $f^n(x)$ , $n\ge 0$ , belong to at most two different orbits of $\sigma : S^1\to S^1$ . Hence, there is one of those orbits, $O=\{\sigma ^n(t(x))\}_{n\ge 0}$ for some $t(x)$ , such that the intersection $O\cap \{\tilde t(f^N(x)): N\in \mathcal {N}(x)\}$ is an infinite set, so that $\tilde t(f^{n_{k_m(x)}}(x))=\sigma ^{n_{k_m(x)}}(t(x))$ for an infinite sequence $(k_m(x))_{m\ge 1}$ .

Let us start over with the $(r/2, C(r/2), x, (k_m(x)))$ -procedure for the point x and the sequence $\{k_j(x)\}$ . Then, by construction, $t_{k_m(x)}=t(x)$ for all m, hence (1) holds with $t(x)$ instead of the previous $\tilde t(x)$ . If $y\in E_\epsilon $ is any other point of the grand orbit $\{f^n(x): n\in \mathbb {Z}\}$ (remember that $f:J^{\prime }_\infty \to J^{\prime }_\infty $ is invertible), the $(r/2, C(r/2), y, (k_m))$ -procedure works for y with the same (perhaps, truncated) sequence $k_1(x)<k_2(x)<\cdots $ , which ensures that (3) holds (for the corrected arguments) too.

Remark 3.2. Given $t(x)$ , we cannot just set $t(f^n(x))=\sigma ^n (t(x))$ to satisfy property (3) because this would change $\kappa $ in the definition of the telescope, so we might lose property (1). Notice that correcting (flipping) $\tilde t(x)$ to $t(x)$ does not change $C(\nu )$ The same goes for flipping any $t(y)$ in the grand orbit of x. But the flipping can make $f^\ell (R_{t(y)})=R_{t(f^N(x)}$ for $f^\ell (y)=f^N(x)$ where $N=n_{k_m}$ with $G(R_{t(f^\ell (y))})\cap \partial B(f^\ell (y),r/2)>L_{r/2}$ , thus yielding (3).

4. Lemmas

Recall that for any $z\in J^{\prime }_\infty $ we define $z_m=f^m(z)$ for any $m\in \mathbb {Z}$ . This makes sense since f is invertible on $J^{\prime }_\infty $ ; see (E).

Lemma 4.1. Let $z(k)\in \bigcup _{j=0}^{p_{n_k}-1}f^{j}(J_{n_k})$ , where $n_k\nearrow \infty $ .

  1. (a) If $z(k)\to z$ then $z\in J_\infty $ .

  2. (b) $z\in J_{n,x}\cap J^{\prime }_\infty $ yields $z_{\pm p_n}\in J_{n,x}$ . If, in addition to (a), $z(k)\in J^{\prime }_\infty $ for all k and $w(k)\to w$ where $w(k)=z(k)_{e p_{n_k}}$ , where e is always either $1$ or $-1$ , then z and w are in the same component of $J_\infty $ .

  3. (c) If $z(k)\in E_\epsilon $ for all k and $t(z(k))\to t$ (where $E_\epsilon $ , $t(z(k))$ are defined in Proposition 3.1), then the ray $R_t$ lands at the limit point z. In particular, given $\sigma>0$ , there is $\Delta (\sigma )>0$ such that $|x_1-x_2|<\sigma $ for some $x_1,x_2\in E_\epsilon $ whenever $|t(x_1)-t(x_2)|<\Delta (\sigma )$ .

Proof. (a) Assume the contrary. Then there is n such that $d:=d(z, \bigcup _{j=0}^{p_{n}-1}{f^j(J_{n}))>0}$ . As, for any $n_k\ge n$ , $z(k)\in \bigcup _{j=0}^{p_{n_k}-1}f^j(J_{n_k})$ , where the latter union is a subset of $\bigcup _{j=0}^{p_{n}-1}f^j(J_{n})$ , the distance between z and $z_k$ is at least d, a contradiction.

(b) $z_{\pm p_n}\in J_{n,x}$ by combinatorics and definitions of points $z_{m}$ . In particular, for every k, $z(k)$ and $w(k)$ are in the same component $f^{j_k}(J_{n_k})$ of $\bigcup _{j=0}^{p_{n_k}-1}f^{j}(J_{n_k})$ . By (a), any limit set A of the sequence of compacts $(f^{j_k}(J_{n_k}))$ in the Hausdorff metric is a subset of $J_\infty $ . On the other hand, A is connected as each set $f^{j_k}(J_{n_k})$ is connected. This proves (b).

(c) We prove only the first claim as the second one directly follows from it. Fix any $\nu \in (0,r)$ and choose $k_0$ such that for any $k>k_0$ , $B(z(k), \nu )\subset B(z,11/10\nu )$ . Then, by Proposition 3.1, part (1), for each $k>k_0$ , the first intersection of the ray $R_{t(z_k)}$ with the boundary of $B(z,(11/10) \nu )$ has level at least $C(\nu )$ . It follows, for any $0<C<C(\nu )$ , that the sequence of arcs of the rays $R_{t_{z_k}}$ between the levels C and $ C(\nu )$ does not exit $B(z,(11/10) \nu )$ for all $k>k_0$ . As $\nu>0$ and $C\in (0, \tilde C(\nu ))$ can be chosen arbitrary small, $R_t$ must land at z.

By Lemma 4.1(c), if the arguments $t(x),t(x')$ of $x,x'\in E_\epsilon $ are close then $x,x'$ are close as well.

Definition 4.2. Given $\epsilon $ and $\rho $ , we define $\delta $ as follows. First, for $\hat r\in (0,1)$ and $\hat C>0$ , we define $\hat \delta =\hat \delta (\hat r,\hat C)>0$ . Namely, let $C_0>0$ be so that the distance between the equipotential of level $C_0$ and $J(f)$ is bigger than $1$ . Then $\hat \delta =\hat \delta (\hat r/2,\hat C)>0$ is such that for any $C\in [\hat C, C_0]$ , if $w_1,w_2$ lie on the same equipotential $\Gamma $ of level C and the difference between external arguments of $w_1,w_2$ is less than $\hat \delta $ , then the length of the shortest arc of the equipotential $\Gamma $ between $w_1$ and $w_2$ is less than $\hat r/2$ . Apply Lemma 4.1(c) with $\sigma =\rho /4$ and find the corresponding $\Delta (\rho /4)$ . Let

$$ \begin{align*}\delta=\delta(\epsilon, \rho):=\min\bigg\{\hat\delta(\rho, C(\rho/2)), \Delta\bigg(\frac{\rho}{4}\bigg)\bigg\},\end{align*} $$

where $C(\nu )$ is defined in Proposition 3.1.

In the next two lemmas we construct curves with special properties. The idea is as follows. Let $x\in E_\epsilon \cap J_{n,x}$ . Then $x_{-p_n}\in J_{n,x}$ . It is easy to get a curve $\gamma $ in $A(\infty )$ . Begin with an arc from a point $b\in R_{t(x)}$ to $g_{p_n}(b)$ and then iterate this arc by $g_{p_n}$ . In this way we get a curve $\gamma $ such that $g^{p_n}(\gamma )\subset \gamma $ , hence $\gamma $ lands at a fixed point a of $f^{p_n}$ . We show in the next lemma (in a more general setting) that if both points $x,x_{-p_n}$ are either in the range of the covering (2.2) (condition (I)) or in the range of the covering (2.3) (condition (II)) then $a\in J_{n,x}$ . This implies that a has to be the $\beta $ -fixed point of $f^{p_n}: J_{n,x}\to J_{n,x}$ . In Lemma 4.5, assuming additionally that $f^{p_n}$ is satellite, we ‘rotate’ the curve $\gamma $ by $g_{p_{n-1}}$ to put the set $J_{n,x}$ in a ‘sector’ bounded by $\gamma $ and by its ‘rotation’. In Lemmas 4.74.8 we consider the case of doubling for which condition (II) usually does not hold.

In what follows, we use the following notation: given $p,q\in \mathbb {N}$ , let

$$ \begin{align*}E_{\epsilon,p,q}=\bigcap_{j=0}^{q-1} f^{jp}(E_\epsilon).\end{align*} $$

This is a closed subset of $E_\epsilon $ of points x such that $x_{-jp}\in E_\epsilon $ for $j=0,1,\ldots ,q-1$ . As $f: J^{\prime }_\infty \to J^{\prime }_\infty $ is a $\mu $ -automorphism, $\mu (E_{\epsilon ,p,q})>1-q\epsilon $ . Notice that this bound is independent of p.

For every $n>0$ consider the closed set $E_{\epsilon , p_n, q}$ . Let $x\in E_{\epsilon , p_n, q}$ . Denote for brevity

$$ \begin{align*}x^k:=x_{-kp_n} \quad\text{and}\quad R^k:=R_{t(x^k)}, \quad k=0,1,\ldots,q-1.\end{align*} $$

By Lemma 4.1(b), $x^k\in J_{n,x}$ . Hence, $t(x^k)\in s_{n, j_n(x)}\subset S_{n,j_n(x)}$ , $0\le k\le q-1$ .

Recall that for a semi-open curve $l: [0,1)\to \mathbb {C}$ , we say that l lands at, or tends to, or converges to a point $z\in \mathbb {C}$ if there exists $\lim _{t\to 1}l(t)=z$ . Then $l(0)$ , z are endpoints of the curve and $l(0)$ is called also the starting point of l.

Lemma 4.3. Fix $\epsilon>0$ and consider the set $E_\epsilon $ with the corresponding constant $r(\epsilon )>0$ . Fix $\rho \in (0,r(\epsilon )/3)$ . Let $\delta :=\delta (\epsilon , \rho )$ from Definition 4.2. For every $q\ge 2$ there exist $\tilde n$ , $\tilde C$ as follows.

For every $n>\tilde n$ consider the closed set $E_{\epsilon , p_n, q}$ . Fix $0\le i<j\le q-1$ . Assume, for an arbitrary n as above, that either (I) $t(x^j)$ and $t(x^i)$ belong to a single component of $s_{n, j_n(x)}$ , or (II) the map $\sigma ^{j_n(x)-1}: S_{n,1}\to S_{n, j_n(x)}$ is a homeomorphism and the length of the arc $S_{n, j_n(x)}$ is less than $\delta $ .

Then the following statements hold.

  1. (a) The map $f^{(j-i) p_n}: g_{(j-i) p_n}(B(x^i,\rho ))\to B(x^i,\rho )$ has a unique fixed point $a=a_n$ and $a\in J_{n,x}$ .

  2. (b) There is a semi-open simple curve

    $$ \begin{align*}\gamma_{p_n,q,i,j}(x)\subset B(x^i, \rho)\cap A(\infty)\end{align*} $$
    such that:
    1. (1) it lands at a and $g_{(j-i) p_n}(\gamma _{p_n,q,i,j}(x))\subset \gamma _{p_n,q,i,j}(x)$ . Another end point b of $\gamma _{p_n,q,i,j}(x)$ lies in $R^i$ and $G(b)>\tilde C/2$ ,

    2. (2) $\gamma _{p_n,q,i,j}(x)=\bigcup _{l\ge 0} g_{(j-i)p_n}^l(L_0\cup L_1)$ where the ‘fundamental arc’ $L_0\cup L_1$ consists of an arc $L_0$ of an equipotential of the level at least $\tilde C/2$ that joins a point $b\in R^i$ with a point $b_1\in R^j$ , being extended by an arc $L_1$ of the ray $R^j$ between points $b_1$ and $g_{(j-i)p_n}(b)\in R^j$ ; in particular, the Green function $G(y)$ at a point y is not increasing as y moves from b to a along $\gamma _{p_n,q,i,j}(x)$ ,

    3. (3) the point a is the landing point of a ray $R(a)$ which is fixed by $f^{(j-i) p_n}$ and which is homotopic to $\gamma _{p_n,q,i,j}(x)$ through a family of curves in $A(\infty )$ with the fixed end point a.

    4. (4) the arguments of all points of the curve $g_{(j-i) p_n}(\gamma _{p_n,q,i,j}(x))$ lie in a single component of $s^1_{n, j_n(x)}$ in case (I) and in a single component of $s_{n,j_n(x)}$ in case (II) (recall that $s^1_{n, j_n(x)}$ has four components and $s_{n,j_n(x)}$ has two components, see §2, (C)).

    Besides,

    (4.1) $$ \begin{align} |a-x^j|\to 0 \quad\text{and}\quad \log\frac{|(g_{(j-i)p_n})'(x^j)|}{|(g_{(j-i)p_n})'(a)|}\to 0 \end{align} $$
    as $n\to \infty $ , uniformly in $x^j$ and q.
  3. (c) If $j-i=1$ then $a=\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ where $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}=f^{j_n(x)-1}(\beta _n)$ , the non-separating fixed point of $f^{p_n}:J_{n,x}\to J_{n,x}$ . Moreover,

    $$ \begin{align*}\chi(\beta_{n,j_n(x)}):=\frac{1}{p_n}\log |(f^{p_n})'(\beta_{n,j_n(x)})|=\frac{1}{p_n}\log |(f^{p_n})'(\beta_{n})|\to \chi(\mu)\end{align*} $$
    as $n\to \infty $ .

Remark 4.4. Note that $a\notin J_\infty $ while $x, x^1,\ldots ,x^{q-1}\in J_\infty $ .

Proof. Fix $n_0$ such that, for every $n>n_0$ and $x\in E_\epsilon $ , the length of each ‘window’ of $s_{n, j_n(x)}$ is less than $\delta $ . Therefore, for $n>n_0$ , in either case (I), (II),

(4.2) $$ \begin{align} |t(x^i)-t(x^j)|<\delta, \end{align} $$

which implies, in particular, that $|x^i-x^j|<\rho /4$ .

Denote $G_n:=g_{(j-i)p_n}$ , which is a holomorphic univalent function in $B(x^i,\rho )$ . Since $g_m$ are uniform contractions there is $n_1$ such that $G_n(\overline {B(x^i,\rho )})\subset B(x^i,\rho /2)$ whenever $n>n_1$ . Let $\tilde n=\max \{n_0, n_1\}$ .

Let also $\tilde C=C(\rho /2)$ , where $C(\nu )$ is defined in Proposition 3.1.

Let $a=a_n$ be the unique fixed point of the latter map $G_n$ . We construct the curve $\gamma _{p_n,q,i,j}(x)$ to the point a as follows. Firstly, joint a point $b\in R^i$ , $G(b)=(3/4)\tilde C$ , to a point $b_1\in R^j$ by an arc $L_0$ of the equipotential $\{G(z)=(3/4)\tilde C\}$ . By the choice of $\delta>0$ , $L_0{\kern-1pt}\subset{\kern-1pt} B(x^i,\rho )$ . Secondly, connect $b_1$ to the point $g_{(j-i)p_n}(b){\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} R^j$ by an arc $L_1{\kern-1pt}\subset{\kern-1pt} R^j$ . Now let $\gamma _{p_n,q,i,j}(x)=\bigcup _{l\ge 0} g_{(j-i)p_n}^l(L_0\cup L_1)$ . Then properties (1), (2) in (b) are immediate and (3) follows from general properties of conformal maps. Now, by Proposition 3.1(2) and (4.2), for all n big enough, $x^j=g_{(j-i)p_n}(x^i)\in g_{(j-i)p_n}(B(x^i,\rho ))\subset B(x^i,\rho )$ ; moreover, the modulus of the annulus $B(x^i,\rho )\setminus g_{(j-i)p_n}(B(x^i,\rho ))$ tends to $\infty $ as $n\to \infty $ . Therefore, (4.1) follows from Koebe, see e.g. [Reference Carleson and Gamelin2, Section 1.1], and Proposition 3.1(2).

It remains to show property (3) and that $a\in J_{n,x}$ . Consider case (II), which is equivalent to saying that the map $\sigma ^{p_n}: s\to S_{n, j_n(x)}$ is a homeomorphism on each of two components s of $s_{n, j_n(x)}$ . Let $\Lambda $ be the set of arguments of points of the curve $\Gamma :=g_{(j-i) p_n}(\gamma _{p_n,q,i,j}(x))$ . Let s be a component that contains $t(x^j)$ . Assume, by contradiction, that $\Lambda $ contains t which is in the boundary of s. Then t is the argument of a point of $G_n^l(L_0)$ , for some $l\ge 1$ , and hence $\sigma ^{l(j-i)p_n}(t)$ is simultaneously the argument of a point of $L_0$ and in the boundary of $S_{n,j_n(x)}$ , a contradiction. Case (I) is similar. Property (3) is verified. In fact, we have proved more: for $k=0,1,\ldots ,j-i-1$ , the set $\sigma ^{k p_n}(\Lambda )$ is a subset of a single (depending on k) component of $s_{n, j_n(x)}$ in case (II) and a single component of $s^1_{n, j_n(x)}$ in case (I). This implies that all points $f^{k p_n}(a)$ , $0\le k\le j-i-1$ , of the cycle of $f^{p_n}$ containing a belong to the closure of $U_{n,j_n(x)}$ in the case (II) and to the closure of $U_{n, j_n(x)-p_n}$ in the case (I). Therefore, this cycle lies in $J_{n,x}$ , in particular, $a\in J_{n,x}$ .

Proof of (c). If $j-i=1$ then a is a fixed point of $f^{p_n}:J_{n,x}\to J_{n,x}$ and, moreover, the ray $R(a)$ lands at a and is fixed by $f^{p_n}$ . Hence, the rotation number of a with respect to the map $f^{p_n}:J_{n,x}\to J_{n,x}$ is zero. On the other hand, $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ is the only such a fixed point, that is, $a=\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ as claimed. Then (4.1) implies that $\chi (\beta _{n,j_n(x)})\to \chi (\mu )$ .

For the rest of the paper, let us fix Q, $\epsilon $ , r, $\rho $ , $\tilde n$ , $\tilde C$ and $\delta $ as follows: $Q\in \mathbb {N}$ , $Q>3$ , is such that

$$ \begin{align*}Q>4\log 2/\chi(\mu).\end{align*} $$

This choice is motivated by the following fact [Reference Hubbard8, Reference Levin14, Reference Pommerenke21]: if a repelling fixed point z of $f^n$ is the landing point of q rays, then $\chi (z):=(1/n)\log |(f^n)'(z)|\le (2/q)\log 2$ . Hence, if $\chi (z)>\chi (\mu )/2$ , then $q<Q$ .

Furthermore, fix $\epsilon>0$ such that $2^{100}Q\epsilon <1$ , apply Proposition 3.1 and Lemma 4.3 and find, first, $r=r(\epsilon )$ , then fix $\rho \in (0,r/32)$ and find the corresponding $\tilde n$ , $\tilde C$ and $\delta $ .

Let

$$ \begin{align*}X_n=E_{\epsilon,p_n,4}\cap E_{\epsilon, p_{n-1},Q}=\bigcap_{i=0}^3 f^{i p_n}(E_\epsilon)\bigcap_{k=0}^{Q-1} f^{k p_{n-1}}(E_\epsilon).\end{align*} $$

Let us analyze several possibilities.

Lemma 4.5. There is $n_*>\tilde n$ as follows. Let $n>n_*$ and $x\in X_n$ . Consider $J_{n,x}=f^{j_n(x)}(J_n)\subset f^{j_{n-1}(x)}(J_{n-1})$ so that $x\in J_{n,x}$ .

Let $x^0=x$ and $x^1=x_{-p_n}$ . Assume that either (I) $t(x^0)$ , $t(x^1)$ belong to a single component of $s_{n, j_n(x)}$ , or (II) the map $\sigma ^{j_n(x)-1}: S_{n,1}\to S_{n, j_n(x)}$ is a homeomorphism and the length of the arc $S_{n, j_n(x)}$ is less than $\delta $ .

Then the following statements hold.

  1. (i) $\chi (\beta _{n,j_n(x)})=\chi (\beta _n)\to \chi (\mu )$ as $n\to \infty $ and $\chi (\beta _n)>\chi (\mu )/2$ for $n>n_*$ .

  2. (ii) Assume that $f^{p_n}$ is satellite, that is (by Lemma 2.1). $\beta _n$ has period $p_{n-1}$ , $q_n\ge 2$ with rotation number $r_n/q_n$ of $\beta _n$ , and $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ is the $\alpha $ (that is, separating) fixed point of $f^{p_{n-1}}: J_{n-1,x}\to J_{n-1,x}$ . Then $q_n<Q$ and

    (4.3) $$ \begin{align} |\beta_{n,j_n(x)}-x_{-k p_{n-1}}\hspace{-1pt}|\to 0, \ n\to\infty, \text{ uniformly in } x\in X_n, \ 1\le k\le q_{n}. \end{align} $$

There exist two simple semi-open curves $\gamma (x)$ and $\tilde \gamma (x)$ that satisfy the following properties.

  1. (1) $\gamma (x)$ and $\tilde \gamma (x)$ tend to $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ and $\gamma (x), \tilde \gamma (x)\subset B(x^0, \rho )\cap A(\infty )$ .

  2. (2) $\gamma (x), \tilde \gamma (x)$ consist of arcs of equipotentials and external rays. The starting point $b_1=b_1(x)$ of $\gamma (x)$ lies in an arc of $R_{t(x^1)}$ and the starting point $\tilde b_1=\tilde b_1(x)$ of $\tilde \gamma (x)$ lies in an arc of $R_{t(\tilde x)}$ where $\tilde x=x_{-i p_{n-1}}$ for some $i=i(x)\in \{1,\ldots , q_n-1\}$ , such that levels of $b_1$ and $\tilde b_1$ are equal and at least $\tilde C/4$ .

  3. (3) One of the two curves (say, $\gamma (x)$ ) is homotopic, through curves in $A(\infty )$ tending to $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ , to the ray $R_{t_{n,j_n(x)}}=f^{j_n(x)-1}(R_{t_n})$ , and the other one to the ray $R_{\tilde t_{n,j_n(x)}}=f^{j_n(x)-1}(R_{\tilde t_n})$ .

  4. (4) $\gamma (x)$ , $\tilde \gamma (x)\subset U_{n-1, j_{n-1}(x)}$ .

  5. (5) $\gamma (x)\subset U_{n,j_n(x)}$ , $\tilde \gamma (x)\subset U_{n,j_n(\tilde x)}$ , in particular, $\gamma (x),\tilde \gamma (x)$ are disjoint, being completed by their common limit point $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ and two other arcs: an arc of the ray $R_{t(x^1)}$ from $b_1\in \gamma (x)$ to $\infty $ and an arc of the ray $R_{t(\tilde x)}$ from $\tilde b_1\in \tilde \gamma (x)$ to $\infty $ , they split the plane into two domains such that one of them contains $I:=J_{n,x}\setminus \beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ and the other one contains all $q_n-1$ other different iterates $f^{k p_{n-1}}(I)$ , $1\le k\le q_n-1$ . The intersection of closures of all those $q_n$ sets consists of the fixed point $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ of $f^{p_{n-1}}$ .

Remark 4.6. Beware that the point x that determines both curves $\gamma (x)$ , $\tilde \gamma (x)$ does not belong to either of these curves.

Proof. Statement (i) follows from Lemma 4.3 where we take $i=0, j=1$ . Fix $n_*>\tilde n$ such that $\chi (\beta _n)>\chi (\mu )/2$ for all $n>n_*$ .

Let us prove (ii). Here we build a ‘flower’ of arcs at the fixed $\beta $ of the satellite $f^{p_n}$ , starting with an arc which is fixed by $f^{p_n}$ , and then ‘rotate’ this arc by a branch of $f^{-p_{n-1}}$ (for which the same $\beta $ point is also a fixed point; see (C)). Let $\gamma '(x):=\gamma _{p_n,1,0,1}(x)$ where the latter curve is defined in Lemma 4.3. Then properties (1)–(3) of the curve $\gamma (x)$ are also satisfied for $\gamma '(x)$ . In particular, $\gamma '(x)$ is homotopic to $R_{t_{n,j_n(x)}}$ .

As both $\tilde t_{n,j_n(x)}, t_{n,j_n(x)}$ are external arguments of $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ which is a $p_{n-1}$ -periodic point of f, there is $i\in \{1,\ldots , q_n-1\}$ such that $\sigma ^{i p_{n-1}}(\tilde t_{n,j_n(x)})=t_{n,j_n(x)}$ . Now we use that $x\in E_{\epsilon , p_{n-1},Q}$ and that $q_{n}<Q$ to prove (4.3). Indeed, for each $k=\{1,\ldots , q_n\}$ , since $f{\kern-1pt}:{\kern-1pt}J_\infty '{\kern-1pt}\to{\kern-1pt} J_\infty '$ is a homeomorphism and $x_{-k p_{n-1}}{\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} E_\epsilon $ , we have $g_{p_n}{\kern-1pt}={\kern-1pt}g_{(q_{n}-k) p_{n-1}}\circ g_{k p_{n-1}}$ . Hence, if $\beta '=g_{k p_{n-1}}(\beta _{n,j_n(x)})$ , then $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}=g_{(q_{n-1}-k) p_{n-1}}(\beta ')$ , implying that $\beta '=f^{(q_{n}-k) p_{n-1}}(\beta _{n,j_n(x)})=\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ . Then $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}, x_{-k p_{n-1}}\in g_{k p_{n-1}}(B(x,\rho ))$ which, along with Proposition 3.1, part (2), implies (4.3).

In turn, (4.3) implies that, provided n is big, $g_{k p_{n-1}}: B(y,\rho /2)\to B(y,\rho /2)$ uniformly in $k=0,1,\ldots , q_n$ where y is either $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ or $x_{-k p_{n-1}}$ .

Now we consider a curve $g_{i \tilde p_{n}}(\gamma '(x))$ that starts at $x_{-i \tilde p_{n}}$ and tends to $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ . By Proposition 3.1 coupled with (4.3), one can join $x_{-i p_{n-1}}$ by an arc of the ray $R_{t(x_{-i p_{n-1}})}$ inside of $B(x,\rho /2)$ up to a point of level $\tilde C/4$ . This will be the required curve $\tilde \gamma (x)$ . To get the curve $\gamma (x)$ we modify $\gamma '(x)=\gamma _{p_n,1,0,1}(x)=\bigcup _{l\ge 0} g_{p_{n}}^l(L_0\cup L_1)$ by cutting off the arc $L_0$ of an equipotential: $\gamma (x)=\gamma '(x)\setminus L_0$ (see Lemma 4.3 for details about $L_0$ ). Properties (1)–(5) follow.

Given a point $x=x^0$ and n such that $x\in f^{j}(J_n)\cap E_{\epsilon , p_n, 1}$ , where $j=j_n(x)$ , let $x^1=x_{-p_n}$ and $t(x^0)$ , $t(x^1)$ be the arguments of $x^0$ , $x^1$ as in Proposition 3.1. We call $x n$ -friendly if $t(x^0)$ and $t(x^{1})$ lie in the same component of $s_{n,j}$ and n-unfriendly otherwise (or simply friendly and unfriendly if n is clear from the context). The name reflects the fact that for an n-friendly point x condition (I) of Lemma 4.5 always holds for $x^1=x$ and $x^2=x_{-p_n}$ , so Lemma 4.5 always applies.

When the rotation number of $\alpha _n$ is equal to $1/2$ we have the following lemma.

Lemma 4.7. There is $\tilde C_3>0$ (depending only on fixed $\epsilon $ and $\rho $ ) as follows. Suppose that, for some $n>\tilde n$ , the rotation number of the separating fixed point $\alpha _n$ is equal to $1/2$ . Let $z=z^0\in f^j(J_n)\cap E_{\epsilon , p_n, 3}$ and $z^i=z_{-i p_n}$ , $i=1,2,3$ . Assume that all three points $z^0, z^1, z^2$ are n-unfriendly.

Then there exist two (semi-open) curves $\gamma ^{1/2}_n(z)$ and $\tilde \gamma ^{1/2}_n(z)$ consisting of arcs of rays and equipotentials with the following properties.

  1. (i) $\gamma ^{1/2}_n(z)\subset B(z,\rho )$ , $\tilde \gamma ^{1/2}_n(z)\subset B(z^1,\rho )$ . Moreover, the arguments of points of $\gamma ^{1/2}_n(z)$ lie in one ‘window’ of $s_{n,j}$ while the arguments of points of $\tilde \gamma ^{1/2}_n(x)$ lie in the other ‘window’ of $s_{n,j}$ .

  2. (ii) $\gamma ^{1/2}_n(z)$ and $\tilde \gamma ^{1/2}_n(z)$ converge to a common point $\alpha ^*_{n,j}$ which is a fixed point of $f^{p_n}:f^j(J_n)\to f^j(J_n)$ (that is, $\alpha ^*_{n,j}$ is either the non-separating fixed point $\beta _{n,j}$ or the separating fixed point $\alpha _{n,j}$ .

  3. (iii) The starting points of $\gamma ^{1/2}_n(z), \tilde \gamma ^{1/2}_n(z)$ have equal Green level. which is bigger than $\tilde C_3$ .

  4. (iv) $z^k-\alpha ^*_{n,j}\to 0$ , $0\le k\le 3$ , as $n\to \infty $ .

Proof. As $z\in E_\epsilon $ , the lengths of the ‘windows’ of $s_{n,j_n(z)}$ tend uniformly to zero as $n\to \infty $ . It follows from the definition of friendly and unfriendly points that $t(z^0),t(z^2)$ are in one ‘window’ of $s_{n,j}$ and $t(z^1),t(z^3)$ are in the other ‘window’ of $s_{n,j}$ . Therefore, condition (I) of Lemma 4.3 holds for each pair $z^0,z^2$ and $z^1,z^3$ . Now, apply Lemma 4.3 to $z\in E_{\epsilon ,p_n,3}$ , first with $i=0$ , $j=2$ , and then with $i=1$ , $j=3$ . Let $\gamma ^{1/2}_n(z)=\gamma _{p_n,3,0,2}(z)$ and $\tilde \gamma ^{1/2}_n(z)=\gamma _{p_n,3,1,3}(z)$ . Then (i) and (iii) hold. To check (ii), note that these curves converge to some points $\alpha ,\tilde \alpha \in f^j(J_n)$ which are fixed by $f^{2p_n}$ On the other hand, since the rotation number of $\alpha _n$ is $1/2$ , $f^{p_n}:f^j(J_n)\to f^j(J_n)$ has no $2$ -cycle. Therefore, one must have either $\alpha =\tilde \alpha =\beta _{n,j}$ or $\alpha =\tilde \alpha =\alpha _{n,j}$ , that is, (ii) holds too. As $t(z^0)-t(z^2)\to 0$ and $t(z^1)-t(z^3)\to 0$ as $n\to \infty $ , $z^0-z^2, z^1-z^3\to 0$ also, by Lemma 4.1. Besides, by (4.1), $z^2-\alpha , z^3-\tilde \alpha \to 0$ as $n\to \infty $ . As $\alpha =\tilde \alpha =\alpha ^*_{n,j}$ , (iv) also follows.

The following lemma is a consequence of Lemmas 4.3 and 4.7.

Lemma 4.8. Let $n>\tilde n$ . Assume that $f^{p_n}$ is satellite and doubling, that is, $\beta _n=\alpha _{n-1}$ and the rotation number of $\alpha _{n-1}$ is equal to $1/2$ (in particular, $p_n=2p_{n-1}$ ). For some $1\le j\le p_{n-1}$ , denote $J:=f^j(J_{n-1})$ . Let $J^1:=f^j(J_{n})$ , $J^0:=f^{j+p_{n-1}}(J_{n})$ be the two small Julia sets of the next level n which are contained in J (note that $J^0$ contains the critical point and $J^1$ contains the critical value of the map $F:=f^{p_{n-1}}: J\to J)$ . Let $x\in J^1\cap E_\epsilon $ be such that all five of its forward iterates $x_{kp_{n-1}}=F^k(x)\in E_\epsilon $ , $k=1,2,3,4,5$ . Then there exist two simple semi-open curves $\Gamma _n^{1/2}(x)$ , $\Gamma _n^{1/2}(x)$ consisting of arcs of rays and equipotentials that satisfy essentially conclusions of the previous lemma where n is replaced by $n-1$ , that is, the following statements hold.

  1. (i) $\Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x), \tilde \Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x)\subset B(x,3/2\rho )$ . Moreover, the arguments of points of $\Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x)$ lie in one ‘window’ of $s_{n-1,j_{n-1}(x)}$ while the arguments of points of $\tilde \Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x)$ lie in the other ‘window’ of $s_{n-1,j_{n-1}(x)}$ .

  2. (ii) $\Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x)$ and $\tilde \Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x)$ converge to a common point $\beta ^*_{n-1,j_{n-1}(x)}$ which is a fixed point of $f^{p_{n-1}}: f^j(J_{n-1})\to f^j(J_{n-1})$ (that is, $\beta ^*_{n-1,j_{n-1}(x)}$ is either the non-separating fixed point $\beta _{n-1,j_{n-1}(x)}$ or the separating fixed point $\alpha _{n-1,j_{n-1}(x)}$ .

  3. (iii) The starting points of $\Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x), \tilde \Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x)$ have equal Green level which is bigger than $\tilde C_3$ .

  4. (iv) $x_{k p_{n-1}}-\beta ^*_{n-1,j_{n-1}(x)}\to 0$ , $0\le k\le 3$ as $n\to \infty $ uniformly in x.

Remark 4.9. The condition $F^k(x){\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} E_\epsilon $ , $0{\kern-1pt}\le{\kern-1pt} k{\kern-1pt}\le{\kern-1pt} 5$ , is equivalent to $x{\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} f^{-5p_{n-1}}(E_{\epsilon ,p_{n-1},6})$ .

Proof. To fix the idea, let us replace $f^{p_{n-1}}: f^j(J_{n-1})\to f^j(J_{n-1})$ , using a conjugacy to a quadratic polynomial, by a quadratic polynomial (also denoted by F) so that now $F:J\to J$ where $J=J(F)$ and $F^2$ is satellite with two small Julia sets $J^0$ , $J^1$ that meet at the $\alpha $ -fixed point of F and rays of arguments $1/3$ , $2/3$ land at $\alpha $ . Here $0\in J^0$ , $F(0)\in J^1$ , $F: J^1\to J^0$ is a homeomorphism, while $F:J^0\to J^1$ is a two-to-one map. If a ray $R_t$ of F has its accumulation set in $J^1$ then $t\in [1/3,5/12]\cup [7/12,2/3]$ and if $R_t$ accumulates in $J^0$ then $t\in [1/6,1/3]\cup [2/3,5/6]$ . This implies that if $R_t$ lands at $x\in J^1$ and t lies in one of the two ‘windows’ $[0,1/2)$ , $(1/2, 1]$ then $R_{\sigma (t)}$ lands at $J^0$ where $\sigma (t)$ must be in a different ‘window’ (in other words, the points of $J^0$ are ‘unfriendly’). Returning to $f^{p_{n-1}}$ , this means, for $x\in J^1$ , that $t(x),t(F(x))$ are always in different components (where by ‘component’ we mean a component of $s_{n-1,j}$ ). Besides, for $y\in J_\infty \cap J$ , y and $F(y)$ are always in different $J^i$ , $i=0,1$ . This leaves us with just the following possibilities.

  1. (i) $t(F(x)), t(F^2(x))$ are in different components. This implies that $t(x), t(F(x))$ are in different components and $t(F(x)), t(F^2(x))$ are in different components, that is, points $F^3(x), F^2(x), F(x)$ are all unfriendly.

  2. (ii) $t(F(x)), t(F^2(x))$ are in the same components. There are two subcases.

  3. (ii) $t(F^3(x)), t(F^4(x))$ are in different components, that is, (i) holds with x replaced by $F^2(x)$ , which implies that $F^5(x), F^4(x), F^3(x)$ are all unfriendly.

  4. (ii) $t(F^3(x)), t(F^4(x))$ are in the same component which then means that $F^2(x)$ and $F^4(x)$ are both friendly.

In cases (i) and (ii $^\prime $ ), apply Lemma 4.7 with $n-1$ instead of n to $z=F^3(x)$ and to $z=F^5(x)$ , respectively, letting $\Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x)=\gamma ^{1/2}_{n-1}(F^3(x))$ , $\tilde \Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x)=\tilde \gamma ^{1/2}_{n-1}(F^3(x))$ and $\Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x)=\gamma ^{1/2}_{n-1}(F^5(x))$ , $\tilde \Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x)=\tilde \gamma ^{1/2}_{n-1}(F^5(x))$ , respectively. In case (ii $^{\prime \prime }$ ), apply Lemma 4.3 with $p_{n-1}$ , $q=1$ , $i=0,j=0$ , first to the point $F^2(x)$ and then to the point $F^4(x)$ , letting $\Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x)=\gamma _{p_{n-1},1,0,1}(F^2(x))$ , $\tilde \Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x)=\gamma _{p_{n-1},1,0,1}(F^4(x))$ .

5. Proof of Theorem 1.1

Every invariant probability measure with positive Lyapunov exponent has an ergodic component with positive exponent. So let $\mu $ be such an ergodic f-invariant measure component supported in $J_\infty $ . First, we have the following general remark.

Remark 5.1. Given $x\in J^{\prime }_\infty $ such that $\tilde r(x)>0$ as in Proposition 2.3, and given n, the set $J_{n,x}=f^{j_n(x)}(J_n)$ cannot be covered by $B(x,\tilde r(x))$ because otherwise the branch $g_{p_n}: B(x,\tilde r(x))\to \mathbb {C}$ of $f^{-p_n}$ , which sends x to $x_{-p_n}\in J_{n,x}$ , meets the critical value along the way so cannot be well defined. Thus $\operatorname {\mathrm {diam}} J_{n,x}>\tilde r(x)$ , for each n, and $\operatorname {\mathrm {diam}} K_x=\lim \operatorname {\mathrm {diam}} J_{n,x}\ge \tilde r(x)$ . In particular, $\operatorname {\mathrm {diam}} J_{n,x}\ge r(\epsilon )$ for all $x\in E_\epsilon $ and n.

We need to prove that f has finitely many satellite renormalizations. Assuming the contrary, let $\mathcal {S}$ be an infinite subsequence such that $f^{p_n}$ is a satellite renormalization of f for each $n\in \mathcal {S}$ .

We arrive at a contradiction by considering, roughly speaking, two alternative situations. In the first one, we find a point $x\in E_\epsilon $ , n, and two curves in $B\cap A(\infty )$ where $B:=B(x,\tilde r(x))$ that tend to the $\beta $ -fixed points of $J_{n,x}$ such that the other ends of the curves can be joined by an arc of equipotential in B, thus ‘surrounding’ $J_{n,x}$ by a ‘triangle’ in B which would be a contradiction as in Remark 5.1. The second situation is when the first one does not occur. Then we use several curves to ‘surround’ $J_{n,x}$ by a ‘quadrilateral’ in B, ending by the same conclusion. The curves we use have been constructed in Lemmas 4.5 and 4.8.

The first situation happens in cases A and B1 below, and the second one in B2, see Figure 2.

Figure 2 Left: cases A and B1. Right: case B2.

Case A: $\mathcal {S}$ contains an infinite sequence of indices of non-doubling renormalizations. Passing to a subsequence, one can assume that $f^{p_n}$ is satellite and not doubling for every $n\in \mathcal {S}$ .

Fix $\zeta =1/4$ . By Lemma 2.2, for each $n\in \mathcal {S}$ and each $j=1,\ldots ,[\zeta p_n]$ , the map $\sigma ^{j-1}:S_{n,1}\to S_{n,j}$ is a homeomorphism and the length $|S_{n,j}|\to 0$ as $n\to \infty $ uniformly in j. Fix N such that $|S_{n,j}|<\delta $ for each $n>N$ , $n\in \mathcal {S}$ . For $n\in \mathcal {S}$ , let

$$ \begin{align*}\mathcal{C}_n=\{f^j(J_n)| 1\le j\le [\zeta p_n]\}.\end{align*} $$

Let $n,m\in \mathcal {S}$ , $m<n$ . Denote $p=p_m, \tilde p =p_n$ , $q=p_n/p_m$ . The intersection $\mathcal {C}_n\cap \mathcal {C}_m$ contains all $f^{j+kp}(J_n)$ with $1\le j\le [\zeta p]$ , $j+kp\le [\zeta \tilde p]$ . Hence,

$$ \begin{align*}\#(\mathcal{C}_n\cap \mathcal{C}_m)&\ge \sum_{j=1}^{[\zeta p]} \bigg[\zeta q - \frac{j}{p}\bigg]\ge [\zeta q-1][\zeta p]\\&\ge\tilde p \bigg(\frac{\zeta p-1}{p} \frac{\zeta q-1}{q}-\frac{\zeta}{q}\bigg)\sim \zeta^2 \tilde p\end{align*} $$

as $p,q\to \infty $ . Therefore, fixing $\kappa =\zeta ^2/2=1/8$ , there are $m_0,k_0$ such that for each $n,m\in \mathcal {S}$ , $m>m_0$ , $n>m+k_0$ ,

$$ \begin{align*}\mu(\mathcal{C}_n\cap \mathcal{C}_m)>\kappa.\end{align*} $$

Fix such $n,m$ . Assume also that $m>\max \{N, n_*\}$ where $n_*$ is defined in Lemma 4.5 and recall the set

$$ \begin{align*}X_n=E_{\epsilon,p_n,4}\cap E_{\epsilon, p_{n-1},Q}=\bigcap_{i=0}^3 f^{i p_n}(E_\epsilon)\bigcap_{k=0}^{Q-1} f^{k p_{n-1}}(E_\epsilon).\end{align*} $$

Since $\mu (X_n)>1-(Q+4)\epsilon >1-\kappa $ , there is $x\in X_n\cap \mathcal {C}_n\cap \mathcal {C}_m$ and, by the choice of n, the assumption (II) of Lemma 4.5 holds for x. Therefore, there exist two simple semi-open curves $\gamma (x)$ and $\tilde \gamma (x)$ that satisfy the following properties: $\gamma (x)$ and $\tilde \gamma (x)$ tend to $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ , $\gamma (x), \tilde \gamma (x)\subset B(x, \rho )\cap A(\infty )$ , and $\gamma (x), \tilde \gamma (x)$ consist of arcs of equipotentials and external rays; the starting point $b_1$ of $\gamma (x)$ and the starting point $\tilde b_1$ of $\tilde \gamma (x)$ have equal levels which is at least $\tilde C/4$ ; $\gamma (x)$ , $\tilde \gamma (x)\subset U_{n-1, j_{n-1}(x)}$ ; finally, being completed by their common limit point $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ and arcs of rays from $b_1\in \gamma (x)$ to $\infty $ and from $\tilde b_1\in \tilde \gamma (x)$ to $\infty $ , they split the plane into two domains such that one of them contains $I:=J_{n,x}\setminus \beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ and the other one contains all other iterates $f^{kp_{n-1}}(I)$ , $1\le k\le q_n-1$ . Now, since $U_{n-1, j_{n-1}(x)}\subset U_{m, j_{m}(x)}$ and by the choice of m, the distance between the arguments of the points $b_1$ and $\tilde b_1$ inside of $S_{n-1,j_{n-1}(x)}$ is less than $\delta $ . By the definition of $\delta $ , $b_1$ and $\tilde b_1$ can be joined by an arc $A_n$ of equipotential inside of $B(x,\rho )\cap U_{n-1, j_{n-1}(x)}$ . Consider a Jordan domain $Z_n$ with the boundary consisting of the arc $A_n$ and semi-open curves $\gamma (x)$ , $\tilde \gamma (x)$ completed by their common limit point $\beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ . Then $Z_n\subset B(x,\rho )$ . By the properties of the curves, $Z_n\cup \beta _{n,j_n(x)}$ contains either $J_{n,x}$ or its iterate $f^{kp_{n-1}}(J_{n,x})$ , for some $1\le k\le q_n-1$ , in a contradiction with Remark 5.1.

We now turn to the complement to case A.

Case B: for all big n, every satellite renormalization $f^{p_n}$ is doubling, that is, $\beta _n=\alpha _{n-1}$ and $p_n=2p_{n-1}$ for every $n\in \mathcal {S}$ . Let $Y_{n-1}=E_{\epsilon ,p_{n-1},6}$ and $\tilde Y_{n-1}=f^{-5p_{n-1}}(Y_{n-1})$ . Note that $\mu (Y_{n-1})=\mu (\tilde Y_{n-1})>1-6\epsilon $ .

For every $n\in \mathcal {S}$ , let

$$ \begin{align*}L_{n}=\bigg\{0<j<p_{n-1}| \mu(f^j(J_{n-1})\cap \tilde Y_{n-1})>\frac{1-2^{12}\epsilon}{p_{n-1}}\bigg\}.\end{align*} $$

As $\mu (\tilde Y_{n-1})>1-6\epsilon $ , it follows that

$$ \begin{align*}\# L_{n}>(1-3/2^{11})p_{n-1}.\end{align*} $$

Since we are in case B, each $f^j(J_{n-1})$ contains precisely two small Julia sets $f^j(J_n),f^{j+p_{n-1}}(J_n)$ of the next level n, each of them of measure $1/(2p_{n-1})$ . Hence, the measure of intersection of each of these small Julia sets with $\tilde Y_{n-1}$ is bigger than $(1/2-2^{10}\epsilon )/p_{n-1}>0$ . By Lemma 4.8, choosing for every $j\in L_n$ a point $x_j\in f^j(J_{n-1})\cap \tilde Y_{n-1}$ , we get a pair of curves $\Gamma ^{1/2}_{n}(x_j),\tilde \Gamma ^{1/2}_n(x_j)$ consisting of arcs of rays and equipotentials as follows. (i) $\Gamma ^{1/2}_{n}(x_j), \tilde \Gamma ^{1/2}_{n}(x_j)\subset B(x_j,3/2\rho )$ . Moreover, arguments of points of $\Gamma ^{1/2}_{n}(x_j)$ lie in one ‘window’ of $s_{n-1,j}$ while arguments of points of $\tilde \Gamma ^{1/2}_{n}(x_j)$ lie in another ‘window’ of $s_{n-1,j}$ . (ii) $\Gamma ^{1/2}_{n}(x_j)$ and $\tilde \Gamma ^{1/2}_{n}(x_j)$ converge to a common point $\beta ^*_{n-1,j}$ which is a fixed point of $f^{p_{n-1}}: f^j(J_{n-1})\to f^j(J_{n-1})$ (that is, $\beta ^*_{n-1,j}$ is either the non-separating fixed point $\beta _{n-1,j}$ or the separating fixed point $\alpha _{n-1,j}$ ). (iii) The start points of $\Gamma ^{1/2}_{n}(x_j), \tilde \Gamma ^{1/2}_{n}(x_j)$ have equal Green level which is bigger than $\tilde C_3$ . (iv) $x_{j}-\beta ^*_{n-1,j}\to 0$ as $n\to \infty $ uniformly in j and $x_j$ . We add one more property as follows. Let

$$ \begin{align*}\Gamma_{n,j}=\Gamma^{1/2}_{n}(x_j)\cup \beta^*_{n-1,j}\cup\tilde\Gamma^{1/2}_{n}(x_j).\end{align*} $$

Then (v) $\Gamma _{n,j}$ is a simple curve; the level of $z\in \Gamma _{n,j}\setminus \{\beta ^*_{n-1,j}\}$ is positive and decreases (not strictly) from $\tilde C_3$ to zero along $\Gamma ^{1/2}_{n}(x_j)$ and then increases from zero to $\tilde C_3$ along $\tilde \Gamma ^{1/2}_{n}(x_j)$ ; moreover, if $j_1,j_2\in L_n$ , $j_1\neq j_2$ , then $\Gamma _{n,1}$ , $\Gamma _{n,j_2}$ are either disjoint or meet at the unique common point $\beta _{n-1,j_1}=\beta _{n-1,j_2}$ and then disjoint with all others $\gamma _{n-1,j}$ , $j\neq j_1,j_2$ . This is because, by property (i), $\Gamma _{n,j}\subset \overline {U_{n-1,j}}$ where (by (C), §2) any two $\overline {U_{n-1,j}}$ , $\overline {U_{n-1,\tilde j}}$ , $j\neq \tilde j$ , are either disjoint or meet at $\beta :=\beta _{n-1,j}=\beta _{n-1,\tilde j}$ in which case $f^{p_{n-1}}$ is satellite. In the case considered, any satellite is doubling so $\beta \neq \beta _{n-1,i}$ for all i different from $j,\tilde j$ .

We assign, for use below, a ‘small’ Julia set $I_{n,j}$ to each $\Gamma _{n,j}$ as follows: by the construction, $\beta ^*_{n-1,j}$ is either the $\beta $ -fixed point of $f^j(J_{n-1})$ or the $\alpha $ -fixed point of $f^j(J_{n-1})$ . In the former case let $I_{n,j}=f^j(J_{n-1})$ , and in the latter case $I_{n,j}=f^j(J_n)$ (one of the two small Julia sets of the next level n that are contained in $f^j(J_{n-1})$ . Observe that $I_{n,j}\cap \Gamma _{n-1,j}=\{\beta ^*_{n-1,j}\}$ and is disjoint with any other $\Gamma _{n, j'}$ provided $\Gamma _{n,j}$ , $\Gamma _{n,j'}$ are disjoint.

There are two subcases B1–B2 to distinguish depending on whether arguments of end points of $\Gamma _{m,j}$ become close or not. If they do, then one can join the end points of some $\Gamma _{n,j}$ by an arc of equipotential inside of $B(x_j,2\rho )\supset \Gamma _{m,j}$ to surround a small Julia set as in case A, which would lead to a contradiction. If they do not, the construction is more subtle: we build a domain (‘quadrilateral’) in $B(x_j,2\rho )$ bounded by two disjoint curves as above completed by two arcs of equipotential that join ends of different curve, so that the quadrilateral obtained again contains a small Julia set.

Case B1: $\liminf _{n\in \mathcal {S},j\in L_n}|S_{n-1,j}|<\delta $ . By property (i) listed above and the definition of $\delta $ , there are a sequence $(n_k)\subset \mathcal {S}$ , $j_k\in L_{n_k}$ and $x_{j_k}$ as above, such that two ends of each curve $\Gamma _{n_k,j_k}$ can be joined inside of $B(x_{j_k},\rho )$ by an arc $A^k$ of equipotential of fixed level $\tilde C_3$ such that all arguments of points in $A^k$ belong to $S_{n_k-1,j_k}$ . Then we arrive at a contradiction as in case A.

Case B2: $|S_{n-1,j}|\ge \delta $ for all big $n\in \mathcal {S}$ and all $j\in L_n$ . Fix $n,m\in \mathcal {S}$ , $m-n\ge 3$ . Define a subset of $L_n$ as follows:

$$ \begin{align*}L_{n}^m=\bigg\{0<j<p_{n-1}| \mu(f^j(J_{n-1})\cap (\tilde Y_{n-1}\cap\tilde Y_{m-1}))>\frac{1-2^{12}\epsilon}{p_{n-1}}\bigg\}.\end{align*} $$

As $\mu (\tilde Y_{n-1}\cap \tilde Y_{m-1})>1-12\epsilon $ ,

$$ \begin{align*}\# L_{n}^m>(1-3/2^{10})p_{n-1}.\end{align*} $$

For each $j\in L_n^m$ we define further

$$ \begin{align*}L_{n,j}^m&=\bigg\{0<k<p_{n-1}| f^k(J_{m-1})\\& \qquad \subset f^j(J_{n-1}) , \mu(f^k(J_{m-1})\cap(\tilde Y_{n-1}\cap\tilde Y_{m-1}))>\frac{1-2^{16}\epsilon}{p_{m-1}}\bigg\}. \end{align*} $$

Then

$$ \begin{align*}\# L_{n,j}^m\ge 5,\end{align*} $$

as otherwise $\# L_{n,j}^m\le 4$ and therefore $(1-2^{12}\epsilon )/p_{n-1}<4/p_{m-1}+(p_{m-1}/p_{n-1}-4) (1-2^{16}\epsilon )/p_{m-1}=2^{18}\epsilon /p_{m-1}+(1-2^{16}\epsilon )/p_{n-1}$ , that is, $p_{m-1}/p_{n-1}<2^{18}\epsilon /(2^{16}\epsilon -2^{12}\epsilon )=4/(1-2^{-4})<8$ , a contradiction because $p_{m-1}/p_{n-1}\ge 2^{m-n}\ge 2^3$ .

Fix $j\in L_n^m$ . Thus $L_{n,j}^m$ contains five pairwise different indices $k_i$ , $1\le k\le 5$ . As $L_{n,j}^m\subset L_m$ , we find five curves $\Gamma _{m-1, k_i}$ . By property (v), if two of them meet, they are disjoint with all others. Therefore, there are at least three of them, denoted by $\Gamma _{m-1,r_i}$ , $i=1,2,3$ , which are pairwise disjoint. Let $w_i,\tilde w_{m,i}$ be the two ends of $\Gamma _{m-1,r_i}$ .

For each $i=1,2,3$ , the arguments of points of $w_{m,i},\tilde w_{m,i}$ lie in different ‘windows’ of $s_{m-1,r_i}$ . On the other hand, by the choice of j, $s_{m-1,r_i}\subset s_{n-1,j}\subset S_{n-1,j}$ . As n is big enough, the lengths of the ‘windows’ of $s_{n-1,j}$ are less than $\delta $ . But since we are in case B2, the length of $S_{n-1,j}$ is bigger than $\delta $ . One can assume, therefore, that, for $i=1,2,3$ , the arguments of $w_{m,i}$ lie in one window of $s_{n-1,j}$ while the arguments of $\tilde w_{m,i}$ are in the other window. Therefore, differences of arguments of all $w_{m,i}$ tend to zero as $m\to \infty $ , and the same for $\tilde w_{m,i}$ . As all $w_{m,i},\tilde w_{m,i}\in E_\epsilon $ , this implies by Lemma 4.1 that ${\max _{1\le i,l\le 3}|w_{m,i}-w_{m,l}|\to 0}$ . This, along with property (iv), implies that $\gamma _{m-1,r_i}\subset B(w_{m,1}, 2\rho )$ , $i=1,2,3$ , for all big m. Since, for big m, differences of arguments of all $w_{m,i}$ are less than $\delta $ , and the same for $\tilde w_{m,i}$ , one can join all $w_{m,i}$ by an arc $D^m$ of equipotential of level $\tilde C_3$ and all $\tilde w_{m,i}$ by an arc $\tilde D^m$ of equipotential of the same level $\tilde C_3$ such that $D^m,\tilde D^m\subset B(w_1,2\rho )$ . Let the end points of $D^m$ be, say, $w_{m,1}$ and $w_{m,3}$ , so that $w_{m,2}\in D^m$ is in between. Since all three curves $\Gamma _{m-1,r_i}$ , $i=1,2,3$ , are pairwise disjoint, the end points of $\tilde D^m$ then have to be $\tilde w_{m,1}$ and $\tilde w_{m,3}$ , so that $\tilde w_{m,2}\in \tilde D^m$ is in between. Therefore, we get a ‘big’ quadrilateral $\Pi _m^0\subset B(w_{m,1}, 2\rho )$ bounded by $D^m,\tilde D^m, \Gamma _{m,1}, \Gamma _{m,3}$ where $\Gamma _{m,i}:=\Gamma _{m-1,r_i}$ , $i=1,2,3$ . The curve $\Gamma _{m,2}$ splits $\Pi _m^0$ into two ‘small’ quadrilaterals $\Pi _m^1,\Pi _m^2$ with a common curve $\Gamma _{m,2}$ in their boundaries. Recall now that the curve $\Gamma _{m,2}$ comes with a small Julia set $I_{m,2}$ of level either $m-1$ or m, such that $I_{m,2}\cap \Gamma _{m,2}$ is a single point while $I_{m,2}$ is disjoint with $\Gamma _{m,1}$ , $\Gamma _{m,3}$ . Therefore, $I_{m,2}\subset \Pi _m^0\subset B(w_{m,1}, 2\rho )$ , a contradiction with Remark 5.1.

6. Proof of Corollaries 1.3 and 1.4

Corollary 1.3 follows directly from the following proposition

Proposition 6.1. Let f be an infinitely renormalizable quadratic polynomial. Then the following conditions are equivalent.

  1. (1) $f: J_\infty \to J_\infty $ has no invariant probability measure with positive exponent.

  2. (2) For every neighborhood W of P and every $\alpha \in (0,1)$ there exist $m_0$ and $n_0$ such that, for each $m\ge m_0$ and $x\in \mathrm {orb}(J_n)$ with $n\ge n_0$ ,

    $$ \begin{align*}\frac{\#\{i| 0\le i<m, f^i(x)\in W\}}{m}>\alpha.\end{align*} $$
    Additionally, $f: P\to P$ has no invariant probability measure with positive exponent.
  3. (3) Every invariant probability measure of $f: J_\infty \to J_\infty $ is, in fact, supported on P and has zero exponent.

  4. (4) For every invariant probability ergodic measure $\mu $ of f on the Julia set J of f, either $\operatorname {\mathrm {supp}}(\mu )\cap J_\infty =\emptyset $ and its Lyapunov exponent $\chi (\mu )>0$ , or $\operatorname {\mathrm {supp}}(\mu )\subset P$ and $\chi (\mu )=0$ .

Proof. (1) $\Rightarrow $ (2). Assume the contrary. Let $E=\mathbb {C}\setminus W$ . Since W is a neighborhood of a compact set P, the Euclidean distance $d(E, P)>0$ . By a standard normality argument, as all periodic points of f are repelling, there are $\unicode{x3bb}>1$ and $k_0>0$ such that ${|(f^k)'(y)|>\unicode{x3bb} }$ whenever $y, f^k(y)\in E$ and $k\ge k_0$ . As (2) does not hold, find $\alpha \in (0,1)$ , a sequence $n_k\to \infty $ , points $x_k\in \mathrm {orb}(J_{n_k})$ and a sequence $m_k\to \infty $ such that, for each k,

$$ \begin{align*}\frac{\#\{i: 0\le i<m_k, f^i(x_k)\in E\}}{m_k}\ge\beta:=1-\alpha.\end{align*} $$

Fix a big k such that $\beta m_k>3k_0$ and consider the times $0\le i_1^k<i_2^k<\cdots i_{l_k}^k<m_k$ where $l_k/m_k\ge \beta $ such that $f^i(x_k)\in E$ . Let $z_k=f^{i_1^k}(x_k)$ so that $z_k\in E\cap \mathrm {orb}(J_n)$ . Therefore, by the choice of $\unicode{x3bb} $ and $k_0$ , $|(f^{m_k-i_1^k})'(z_k)|\ge \tilde {\unicode{x3bb}} ^{m_k}\ge \tilde {\unicode{x3bb}} ^{m_k-i_1}$ where $\tilde {\unicode{x3bb}} =\unicode{x3bb} ^{{\beta }/{2k_0}}>1$ . In this way we get a sequence of measures $\mu _k=({1}/{m_k-i_1^k})\sum _{i=0}^{m_k-i_1^k-1}\delta _{f^i(z_k)}$ such that the Lyapunov exponent of $\mu _k$ is at least $\log \tilde {\unicode{x3bb}}>0$ . Passing to a subsequence, one can assume that $\{\mu _k\}$ converges weak-* to a measure $\mu $ . Then $\mu $ is an f-invariant probability measure on $J_\infty =\cap \mathrm {orb}(J_n)$ with the exponent at least $\log \tilde {\unicode{x3bb}}> 0$ , a contradiction with (1).

(2) $\Rightarrow $ (3). By Birkhoff’s ergodic theorem along with [Reference Przytycki22].

(3) $\Rightarrow $ (4). Let $\mu $ be as in (4) and $\overline {U}\cap P=\emptyset $ for some open set U with $\mu (U)>0$ . Let $F:U\to U$ be the first return map equipped with the induced invariant measure $\mu _U$ . By Birkhoff’s ergodic theorem and by an argument as in (1) $\Rightarrow $ (2), the exponent $\chi _F(\mu _U)$ of F with respect to $\mu _U$ is strictly positive. Hence, $\chi (\mu )=\mu (U)\chi _F(\mu _U)$ is positive too. This proves the implication.

And (4) obviously implies (1).

Proof of Corollary 1.4

If $\overline \chi (x)$ were strictly positive, for some $x\in J_\infty $ , that would imply, by a standard argument (see the proof of Corollary 1.3), the existence of an f-invariant measure with positive exponent supported in $\omega (x)\subset J_\infty $ , with a contradiction to Theorem 1.1. This proves (1.1). By [Reference Levin, Przytycki and Shen13], $\liminf _{n\to \infty } ({1}/{n})\log |(f^n)'(c)|\ge 0$ . On the other hand, by (1.1), $\overline \chi (c)\le 0$ , which proves (1.2).

Acknowledgements

The conclusion (1.2) of Corollary 1.4 that the Lyapunov exponent at the critical value equals zero partly answers a question by Weixiao Shen (Shen asked the following question, in relation to Corollary 5.5 of [Reference Levin, Przytycki and Shen13]: is it possible that the upper Lyapunov exponent at a critical value $v$ of a polynomial g is positive, assuming that g is infinitely renormalizable around $v$ ? See also Remark 1.1). which inspired the present work as well as the previous paper [Reference Levin and Przytycki12]. The authors thank the referee for careful reading the paper and many helpful comments. The first author was partially supported by ISF grant 1226/17, Israel. The second author was partially supported by the National Science Centre, Poland, Grant OPUS 21 ‘Holomorphic dynamics, fractals, thermodynamic formalism’, 2021/41/B/ST1/00461.

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Figure 0

Figure 1 $q_n=3$.

Figure 1

Figure 2 Left: cases A and B1. Right: case B2.