Quasicircle
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mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, a quasicircle is a Jordan curve in the
complex plane In mathematics, the complex plane is the plane formed by the complex numbers, with a Cartesian coordinate system such that the -axis, called the real axis, is formed by the real numbers, and the -axis, called the imaginary axis, is formed by the ...
that is the image of a
circle A circle is a shape consisting of all points in a plane that are at a given distance from a given point, the centre. Equivalently, it is the curve traced out by a point that moves in a plane so that its distance from a given point is const ...
under a
quasiconformal mapping In mathematical complex analysis, a quasiconformal mapping, introduced by and named by , is a homeomorphism between plane domains which to first order takes small circles to small ellipses of bounded eccentricity. Intuitively, let ''f'' : ''D' ...
of the plane onto itself. Originally introduced independently by and , in the older literature (in German) they were referred to as quasiconformal curves, a terminology which also applied to
arc ARC may refer to: Business * Aircraft Radio Corporation, a major avionics manufacturer from the 1920s to the '50s * Airlines Reporting Corporation, an airline-owned company that provides ticket distribution, reporting, and settlement services * ...
s. In
complex analysis Complex analysis, traditionally known as the theory of functions of a complex variable, is the branch of mathematical analysis that investigates Function (mathematics), functions of complex numbers. It is helpful in many branches of mathemati ...
and geometric function theory, quasicircles play a fundamental role in the description of the
universal Teichmüller space In mathematical complex analysis, universal Teichmüller space ''T''(1) is a Teichmüller space containing the Teichmüller space ''T''(''G'') of every Fuchsian group ''G''. It was introduced by as the set of boundary values of quasiconformal ma ...
, through quasisymmetric homeomorphisms of the circle. Quasicircles also play an important role in
complex dynamical system Complex dynamics is the study of dynamical systems defined by iteration of functions on complex number spaces. Complex analytic dynamics is the study of the dynamics of specifically analytic functions. Techniques *General **Montel's theorem **Po ...
s.


Definitions

A quasicircle is defined as the image of a circle under a
quasiconformal mapping In mathematical complex analysis, a quasiconformal mapping, introduced by and named by , is a homeomorphism between plane domains which to first order takes small circles to small ellipses of bounded eccentricity. Intuitively, let ''f'' : ''D' ...
of the
extended complex plane In mathematics, the Riemann sphere, named after Bernhard Riemann, is a model of the extended complex plane: the complex plane plus one point at infinity. This extended plane represents the extended complex numbers, that is, the complex numbers ...
. It is called a ''K''-quasicircle if the quasiconformal mapping has dilatation ''K''. The definition of quasicircle generalizes the characterization of a Jordan curve as the image of a circle under a homeomorphism of the plane. In particular a quasicircle is a Jordan curve. The interior of a quasicircle is called a ''quasidisk''. As shown in , where the older term "quasiconformal curve" is used, if a Jordan curve is the image of a circle under a quasiconformal map in a neighbourhood of the curve, then it is also the image of a circle under a quasiconformal mapping of the extended plane and thus a quasicircle. The same is true for "quasiconformal arcs" which can be defined as quasiconformal images of a circular arc either in an open set or equivalently in the extended plane.


Geometric characterizations

gave a geometric characterization of quasicircles as those Jordan curves for which the absolute value of the
cross-ratio In geometry, the cross-ratio, also called the double ratio and anharmonic ratio, is a number associated with a list of four collinear points, particularly points on a projective line. Given four points ''A'', ''B'', ''C'' and ''D'' on a line, the ...
of any four points, taken in cyclic order, is bounded below by a positive constant. Ahlfors also proved that quasicircles can be characterized in terms of a reverse triangle inequality for three points: there should be a constant ''C'' such that if two points ''z''1 and ''z''2 are chosen on the curve and ''z''3 lies on the shorter of the resulting arcs, then : , z_1-z_3, + , z_2-z_3, \le C , z_1-z_2, . This property is also called ''bounded turning'' or the ''arc condition''. For Jordan curves in the extended plane passing through ∞, gave a simpler necessary and sufficient condition to be a quasicircle. There is a constant ''C'' > 0 such that if ''z''1, ''z''2 are any points on the curve and ''z''3 lies on the segment between them, then :\displaystyle These metric characterizations imply that an arc or closed curve is quasiconformal whenever it arises as the image of an interval or the circle under a bi-Lipschitz map ''f'', i.e. satisfying : C_1, s-t, \le , f(s)-f(t), \le C_2 , s-t, for positive constants ''C''''i''.


Quasicircles and quasisymmetric homeomorphisms

If φ is a quasisymmetric homeomorphism of the circle, then there are conformal maps ''f'' of [''z'', < 1 and ''g'' of , ''z'', >1 into disjoint regions such that the complement of the images of ''f'' and ''g'' is a Jordan curve. The maps ''f'' and ''g'' extend continuously to the circle , ''z'', = 1 and the sewing equation : \varphi= g^\circ f holds. The image of the circle is a quasicircle. Conversely, using the Riemann mapping theorem, the conformal maps ''f'' and ''g'' uniformizing the outside of a quasicircle give rise to a quasisymmetric homeomorphism through the above equation. The quotient space of the group of quasisymmetric homeomorphisms by the subgroup of
Möbius transformation In geometry and complex analysis, a Möbius transformation of the complex plane is a rational function of the form f(z) = \frac of one complex variable ''z''; here the coefficients ''a'', ''b'', ''c'', ''d'' are complex numbers satisfying ''ad'' ...
s provides a model of
universal Teichmüller space In mathematical complex analysis, universal Teichmüller space ''T''(1) is a Teichmüller space containing the Teichmüller space ''T''(''G'') of every Fuchsian group ''G''. It was introduced by as the set of boundary values of quasiconformal ma ...
. The above correspondence shows that the space of quasicircles can also be taken as a model.


Quasiconformal reflection

A quasiconformal reflection in a Jordan curve is an orientation-reversing quasiconformal map of period 2 which switches the inside and the outside of the curve fixing points on the curve. Since the map :\displaystyle provides such a reflection for the unit circle, any quasicircle admits a quasiconformal reflection. proved that this property characterizes quasicircles. Ahlfors noted that this result can be applied to uniformly bounded holomorphic
univalent function In mathematics, in the branch of complex analysis, a holomorphic function on an open subset of the complex plane is called univalent if it is injective. Examples The function f \colon z \mapsto 2z + z^2 is univalent in the open unit disc, as f(z ...
s ''f''(''z'') on the unit disk ''D''. Let Ω = ''f''(''D''). As Carathéodory had proved using his theory of prime ends, ''f'' extends continuously to the unit circle if and only if ∂Ω is locally connected, i.e. admits a covering by finitely many compact connected sets of arbitrarily small diameter. The extension to the circle is 1-1 if and only if ∂Ω has no cut points, i.e. points which when removed from ∂Ω yield a disconnected set. Carathéodory's theorem shows that a locally set without cut points is just a Jordan curve and that in precisely this case is the extension of ''f'' to the closed unit disk a homeomorphism. If ''f'' extends to a quasiconformal mapping of the extended complex plane then ∂Ω is by definition a quasicircle. Conversely observed that if ∂Ω is a quasicircle and ''R''1 denotes the quasiconformal reflection in ∂Ω then the assignment : \displaystyle for , ''z'', > 1 defines a quasiconformal extension of ''f'' to the extended complex plane.


Complex dynamical systems

Quasicircles were known to arise as the Julia sets of rational maps ''R''(''z''). proved that if the Fatou set of ''R'' has two components and the action of ''R'' on the Julia set is "hyperbolic", i.e. there are constants ''c'' > 0 and ''A'' > 1 such that : , \partial_z R^n(z), \ge c A^n on the Julia set, then the Julia set is a quasicircle. There are many examples: * quadratic polynomials ''R''(''z'') = ''z''2 + ''c'' with an attracting fixed point * the
Douady rabbit The Douady rabbit is any of various particular filled Julia sets associated with the parameter near the center period 3 buds of Mandelbrot set for complex quadratic map. It is named after French mathematician Adrien Douady. Formula The rabbi ...
(''c'' = –0.122561 + 0.744862i, where ''c''3 + 2 ''c''2 + ''c'' + 1 = 0) * quadratic polynomials ''z''2 + λ''z'' with , λ, < 1 * the Koch snowflake


Quasi-Fuchsian groups

Quasi-Fuchsian group In the mathematical theory of Kleinian groups, a quasi-Fuchsian group is a Kleinian group whose limit set is contained in an invariant Jordan curve. If the limit set is equal to the Jordan curve the quasi-Fuchsian group is said to be of type one, a ...
s are obtained as quasiconformal deformations of Fuchsian groups. By definition their limit sets are quasicircles. Let Γ be a Fuchsian group of the first kind: a discrete subgroup of the Möbius group preserving the unit circle. acting properly discontinuously on the unit disk ''D'' and with limit set the unit circle. Let μ(''z'') be a measurable function on ''D'' with :\, \mu\, _\infty < 1 such that μ is Γ-invariant, i.e. :\mu(g(z))=\mu(z) for every ''g'' in Γ. (μ is thus a "Beltrami differential" on the
Riemann surface In mathematics, particularly in complex analysis, a Riemann surface is a connected one-dimensional complex manifold. These surfaces were first studied by and are named after Bernhard Riemann. Riemann surfaces can be thought of as deformed vers ...
''D'' / Γ.) Extend μ to a function on C by setting μ(''z'') = 0 off ''D''. The
Beltrami equation In mathematics, the Beltrami equation, named after Eugenio Beltrami, is the partial differential equation : = \mu . for ''w'' a complex distribution of the complex variable ''z'' in some open set ''U'', with derivatives that are locally ''L''2 ...
: \partial_ f (z) =\mu(z)\partial_zf(z) admits a solution unique up to composition with a Möbius transformation. It is a quasiconformal homeomorphism of the extended complex plane. If ''g'' is an element of Γ, then ''f''(''g''(''z'')) gives another solution of the Beltrami equation, so that :\alpha(g)=f\circ g \circ f^ is a Möbius transformation. The group α(Γ) is a quasi-Fuchsian group with limit set the quasicircle given by the image of the unit circle under ''f''.


Hausdorff dimension

It is known that there are quasicircles for which no segment has finite length. The
Hausdorff dimension In mathematics, Hausdorff dimension is a measure of ''roughness'', or more specifically, fractal dimension, that was first introduced in 1918 by mathematician Felix Hausdorff. For instance, the Hausdorff dimension of a single point is zero, of a ...
of quasicircles was first investigated by , who proved that it can take all values in the interval [1,2). , using the new technique of "holomorphic motions" was able to estimate the change in the Hausdorff dimension of any planar set under a quasiconformal map with dilatation ''K''. For quasicircles ''C'', there was a crude estimate for the Hausdorff dimension : d_H(C) \le 1 + k where :k=. On the other hand, the Hausdorff dimension for the Julia sets ''J''c of the iterates of the rational maps :R(z) =z^2 +c had been estimated as result of the work of Rufus Bowen and David Ruelle, who showed that :1 < d_H(J_c) < 1 + + o(, c, ^2). Since these are quasicircles corresponding to a dilatation : K=\sqrt where : t= , 1-\sqrt, , this led to show that for ''k'' small :1+ 0.36 k^2\le d_H(C) \le 1 + 37 k^2. Having improved the lower bound following calculations for the Koch snowflake with Steffen Rohde and
Oded Schramm Oded Schramm ( he, עודד שרם; December 10, 1961 – September 1, 2008) was an Israeli-American mathematician known for the invention of the Schramm–Loewner evolution (SLE) and for working at the intersection of conformal field theory ...
, conjectured that : d_H(C) \le 1 + k^2. This conjecture was proved by ; a complete account of his proof, prior to publication, was already given in . For a quasi-Fuchsian group and showed that the Hausdorff dimension ''d'' of the limit set is always greater than 1. When ''d'' < 2, the quantity :\lambda=d(2-d)\,\in (0,1) is the lowest eigenvalue of the Laplacian of the corresponding hyperbolic 3-manifold.


Notes


References

* * * * * *, Section 13.2, Dimension of quasicircles. * * * * * * *'' + * * * * * * * * * * *{{citation , first=S., last= Smirnov , authorlink=Stanislav Smirnov , title=Dimension of quasicircles , journal=
Acta Mathematica ''Acta Mathematica'' is a peer-reviewed open-access scientific journal covering research in all fields of mathematics. According to Cédric Villani, this journal is "considered by many to be the most prestigious of all mathematical research journ ...
, volume=205 , year=2010 , pages=189–197 , mr=2736155 , doi=10.1007/s11511-010-0053-8 , arxiv=0904.1237 , s2cid= 17945998 Complex analysis Dynamical systems Fractals