2. Underlying Results
2.1. Teichmüller Spaces of Punctured Spheres
Consider the ordered
n-tuples of points
with distinct
and the corresponding punctured spheres
regarded as Riemann surfaces of genus zero. Fix a collection
defining the base point
of Teichmüller space
of
n-punctured spheres. Its points are the equivalence classes
of Beltrami coefficients from the ball
under the relationship that
if the corresponding quasiconformal homeomorphisms
(the solutions of the Beltrami equation
with
) are homotopic on
(and hence coincide at the points
). This models
as the quotient space
with a complex Banach structure of dimension
inherited from the ball
.
Another canonical model of
is obtained using the uniformization of Riemann surfaces and the holomorphic Bers embedding of Teichmüller spaces. Consider the upper and lower half-planes
The holomorphic universal covering map
provides a torsion-free Fuchsian group
of the first kind acting discontinuously on
, and the surface
is represented (up to conformal equivalence) as the quotient space
. The functions
are lifted to
U as the Beltrami
-measurable forms
on
U with respect to
, satisfying
and forming the corresponding Banach space
. We extend these
by zero to
and consider the unit ball
of this space
. The corresponding quasiconformal maps
are conformal on the half-plane
, and their
Schwarzian derivatives.
fill a bounded domain in the complex
-dimensional space
of hyperbolically bounded holomorphic
-automorphic forms of degree
on
(i.e., satisfy
), with norm
This domain models the Teichmüller space of the group . It is canonically isomorphic to the space (and to a bounded domain in the complex Euclidean space ).
The indicated map determines a holomorphic map ; it has only local holomorphic sections.
Note also that , where is the universal Teichmüller space (modeled as a domain of the Schwarzian derivatives of all univalent functions on admitting quasiconformal extension to U).
2.2. Connection with Interpolation of Univalent Functions
The collections (1) fills a domain
in
obtained by deleting from this space the hyperplanes
, and with
. This domain represents the Torelli space of the spheres
and is covered by
, which is given by the following lemma (cf., e.g., [
10]; [
11], Section 2.8).
Lemma 1. The holomorphic universal covering space of is the Teichmüller space . This means that for each punctured sphere , there is a holomorphic universal covering The covering map is well defined bywhere denotes the canonical projection of the ball onto the space .
Lemma 1 also yields that the truncated collections provide the local complex coordinates on the space and define its complex structure.
These coordinates are simply connected with the Bers local complex coordinates on
(related to basis of the tangent spaces to
at its points, see [
12]) via standard variation of quasiconformal maps of
with a uniform estimate of the ratio
on compacts in
(see, e.g., [
13]).
It turns out that one can obtain the whole space
using only the similar equivalence classes
of the Beltrami coefficients from the ball
(vanishing on
, requiring that the corresponding quasiconformal homeomorphisms
are homotopic on the punctured sphere
. Surjectivity of this holomorphic quotient map
is a consequence of the following interpolation result from [
14].
Lemma 2. Given two cyclically ordered collections of points and on the unit circle , there exists a holomorphic univalent function f in the closure of the unit disk such that for distinct from , and for all . Moreover, there exist univalent polynomials f with such an interpolation property.
It follows that the function f given by Lemma 2 is actually holomorphic and univalent (hence, maps conformally) in a broader disk .
First of all, on the unit circle . Indeed, if at some point , then in its neighborhood , where for some , which contradicts the injectivity of on . Therefore, f is univalent in some disk .
Assuming, on the contrary, that f is not globally univalent in any admissible disk with , one obtains the distinct sequences with for any n, whose limit points lie on . Then, in the limit, we have , which in the case , contradicts the univalence of f on given by Lemma 2, and in the case , contradicts the local univalence of f in a neighborhood of .
The interpolating function f given by Lemma 2 is extended quasiconformally to the whole sphere across any circle with indicated above. Hence, given a cyclically ordered collection of points on , then for any ordered collection in , there exists a quasiconformal homeomorphism of the sphere carrying the points to , and such that its restriction to the closed disk is biholomorphic on .
Taking the quasicircles L passing through the points and such that each belongs to an analytic subarc of L, one obtains quasiconformal extensions of the interpolating function f, which are biholomorphic on the union of and some neighborhoods of the initial points . Now Lemma 1 provides quasiconformal extensions of f lying in prescribed homotopy classes of homeomorphisms .
2.3. The Bers fiber space
Pick a space
with
and let
Due to the Bers isomorphism theorem,
the space is biholomorphically isomorphic to the Bers fiber spaceoverwith holomorphic projection (see [
15]).
This fiber space is a bounded hyperbolic domain in and represents the collection of domains (the universal covers of the surfaces ) as a holomorphic family over the space .
The indicated isomorphism between
and
is induced by the inclusion map
forgetting the puncture at
, via
where
is the lift of
j to
U and
is one of the points from the fiber over
under the quotient map
.
Note also that the holomorphic universal covering maps
and
(and similarly, the corresponding covering maps in
U) are related by
where
is the lift of
j. This induces a surjective homomorphism of the covering groups
by
and the norm preserving isomorphism
by
which projects to the surfaces
and
as the inclusion of the space
of holomorphic quadratic differentials corresponding to
in the space
(cf. [
16]).
The Bers theorem is valid for the Teichmüller space of any punctured hyperbolic Riemann surface and implies that is biholomorphically isomorphic to the Bers fiber space over .
2.4. Holomorphic Curves and Holomorphic Sections
The group
uniformizing the surface
acts discontinuously on the fiber space
as a group of biholomorphic maps by
where
, and
(see [
15]). The quotient space
is called the
n-punctured Teichmüller curve and depends only on the analytic type of the
group. The projection
induces a holomorphic projection
This curve is also a complex manifold with fibers .
Due to the deep Hubbard–Earle–Kra theorem [
16,
17],
the projections and (4) have no holomorphic sections for any (more generally, for all spaces
corresponding to groups
without elliptic elements, excluding the spaces
and
). Such sections exist for
groups containing elliptic elements.
In the exceptional cases of
and
, there is a group
that contains
as a subgroup of index two. Then,
, and the elliptic elements
produce the indicated holomorphic sections
s as the maps
where
is a fixed point of
in the half-plane
U. These sections are called the
Weierstrass sections (in view of their connection with the Weierstrass points of the hyperelliptic surface
). We describe these sections following [
16].
We also consider the
punctured fiber space to be the largest open dense subset of
on which
acts freely and let
For with no elliptic elements, the universal covering space for is .
If contains elliptic elements , then any holomorphic section is determined by map (6) so that is exactly one fixed point of corresponding map (4) in the fiber . These holomorphic sections take their values in the set and do not provide, in general, sections of projection (5).
In the case of spaces and , either of the corresponding curves or has a unique biholomorphic self-map of order two, which maps each fiber into itself. The fixed-point locus of is a finite set of connected closed complex submanifolds of , and the restriction of map (5) to one of these submanifolds is a holomorphic map onto ; its inverse is a Weierstrass section. The restriction of to each fiber is a conformal involution of the corresponding hyperelliptic Riemann surface interchanging its sheets, and the fixed points of are the Weierstrass points on this surface.
In dimension one, there are three biholomorphically isomorphic Teichmüller spaces
and
(see, e.g., [
15,
18]). We shall use the last two spaces. Their fiber space
is isomorphic to
.
As a special case of the Hubbard–Earle–Kra theorem [
16,
17], we have:
Lemma 3. (a) The curve has, for any of its points x, a unique holomorphic section s with .
(b) If , only curves and have holomorphic sections, which are their Weierstrass sections.
In particular, curve has six disjoint holomorphic sections corresponding to the Weierstrass points of hyperelliptic surfaces of genus two.
3. Holomorphic Maps of into Universal Teichmüller Space and Holomorphic Contractibility
3.1. Equivalence Relations
The universal Teichmüller space is the space of quasisymmetric homeomorphisms of the unit circle factorized by Möbius maps; all Teichmüller spaces have their isometric copies in .
The canonical complex Banach structure on
is defined by the factorization of the ball of the Beltrami coefficients
(i.e., supported in the upper-half plane), letting
be equivalent if the corresponding quasiconformal maps
coincide on
(hence, on
). Such
and the corresponding maps
are called
-
equivalent. The equivalence classes
are in one-to-one correspondence with the Schwarzian derivatives
in
, which fill a bounded domain in the space
(see
Section 2.1).
The map is holomorphic and descends to a biholomorphic map of the space onto this domain, which we will identify with . As was mentioned above, it contains the Teichmüller spaces of all hyperbolic Riemann surfaces and of Fuchsian groups as complex submanifolds.
On this ball, we also define another equivalence relationship, letting be equivalent if for all j and the homeomorphisms are homotopic on the punctured sphere . Let us call such and strongly n-equivalent.
Lemma 4. If the coefficients are -equivalent, then they are also strongly n-equivalent.
The proof of this lemma is given in [
19].
In view of Lemmas 1 and 4, the above factorizations of the ball generate (by descending to the equivalence classes) a holomorphic map of the underlying space into .
This map is a split immersion (has local holomorphic sections), which is a consequence, for example, of the following existence theorem from [
13], which we present here as
Lemma 5. Let D be a finitely connected domain on the Riemann sphere . Assume that there are a set E of positive, two-dimensional Lebesgue measures and a finite number of points distinguished in D. Let be non-negative integers assigned to , respectively, so that if .
Then, for a sufficiently small and , and for any given collection of numbers , which satisfy the conditions ,there exists a quasiconformal automorphism h of domain D, which is conformal on and satisfies Moreover, the Beltrami coefficient of h on E satisfies . The constants and M depends only upon the sets and the vectors and .
3.2. Surjectivity
In fact, we have more, given by the following theorem.
Theorem 3. Map χ is surjective and generates an open holomorphic map s of the space into the universal Teichmüller space , embedding into as a -dimensional submanifold.
In particular, this theorem corrects the assertion of Lemma 3 in [
9] (mentioned in the preamble).
Proof of Theorem 3. The surjectivity of
is a consequence of Lemma 2. To construct
s, we take a dense subset
accumulating to all points of
and considering the punctured spheres
with
. The equivalence relations on
for
and
generate the corresponding holomorphic map
. □
Uniformizing the surfaces
and
by the corresponding torsion-free Fuchsian groups
and
of the first kind acting discontinuously on
and applying the construction from
Section 2.3 to
and
(forgetting the additional punctures), one obtains, similar to (3), the norm-preserving isomorphism
by
which projects to the surfaces
and
as the inclusion of the space
of quadratic differentials corresponding to
into the space
, and (since projection
has local holomorphic sections) geometrically, this relation yields a holomorphic embedding of the space
into
as a
-dimensional submanifold. We denote this embedding by
.
To investigate the limit function for
, we compose the maps
with the canonical biholomorphic isomorphisms
Then the elements of
are given by
and this is a collection of the Schwarzians
corresponding to the points
of
. Therefore, for any surface
, we have
Each is the covering group of the universal cover , which can be normalized (conjugating appropriately ) by . Take the fundamental polygon obtained as the union of the circular m-gon in centered at with zero angles at the vertices and its reflection with respect to one of the boundary arcs. These polygons increasingly exhaust the half-plane ; hence, by the Carathéodory kernel theorem, the maps converge to the identity map locally uniformly in .
Since the set of punctures e is dense on , it completely determines the equivalence classes and as the points of the universal space . The limit function maps into the space and also is canonically defined by the marked spheres .
Similar to (7), the function is represented as the Schwarzian of some univalent function on with a quasiconformal extension to determined by . Then, by the well-known property of elements in the functional spaces with sup norms, is also holomorphic in the -norm on .
Lemma 5 yields that is a locally open map from to . Therefore, the image is an -dimensional complex submanifold in , biholomorphically equivalent to . The proof of Theorem 2 is completed.
The holomorphy property indicated above is based on the following lemma of Earle [
20].
Lemma 6. Let be open subsets of complex Banach spaces and be the Banach space of holomorphic functions on E with sup norm. If is a bounded map such that is holomorphic for each , then map φ is holomorphic.
The holomorphy of
in
t for fixed
x implies the existence of complex directional derivatives
while the boundedness of
in the sup norm provides the uniform estimate
for sufficiently small
and
.
3.3. Explicit Construction of Holomorphic Homotopy
Now we may construct the desired holomorphic homotopy of into its base point and establish the general result:
Pick a collection and the marked surface as indicated above, and consider its Teichmüller spaces and .
Using the canonical embedding of
in
via
, we define on the space
a holomorphic homotopy applying the maps
and
; then,
This point-wise equality determines a bounded holomorphic map by Lemma 6
with
; its boundedness follows from the estimate
We apply homotopy (8) to
. Since it is not compatible with the group
, there are images
that are located in
outside of
. Map
carries these images to the points of the space
. We compose this map with the holomorphic map
s given by Lemma 3 and with a biholomorphism
, getting the function
which maps holomorphically
into
with
.
A crucial step in constructing is to establish that function (9) extends holomorphically to the limit points representing the initial Schwarzians . This property does not extend (in the -norm) to all points of .
To prove the limit holomorphy, fix a point and consider, in its small neighborhood , the local coordinates introduced above.
Both maps
and
are holomorphic in the points
of this neighborhood for all
t with
. On the other hand, coordinates
are determined by the corresponding quasiconformal maps
and, together with these maps, are uniformly continuous in
t in the closed disk
. This follows from the uniform boundedness of dilatations given by the estimate
(which holds for generic holomorphic motions) and from non-increasing the Kobayashi metric
under holomorphic maps. Since this metric on Teichmüller spaces equals their intrinsic Teichmüller metric
, one gets from (10),
Hence, function determines a normal family on .
Applying the classical Weierstrass theorem about the locally uniform convergent sequences of holomorphic functions in finite-dimensional domains, one derives that the limit function
is also holomorphic on
and then on
, which completes the construction of the desired holomorphic homotopy on
.
4. Second Proof of Holomorphic Contractibility for Low-Dimensional Teichmüller Spaces
The previous section implies the proof of holomorphic contractibility for all spaces
with
, which also yields, in particular, Theorem 2. In this section, we provide another proof of this important theorem; it relies on the intrinsic features of the two and three-dimensional Teichmüller spaces mentioned in
Section 2.4.
- (a)
Case (dimension two). It is enough to establish holomorphic contractibility of the space for the spheres
The fibers of are the spheres with quadruples of punctures .
We start with the construction of the needed holomorphic homotopy of the space
to its base point
and first apply the assertion
of Lemma 3 of holomorphic sections over
. It implies that for any point
a unique holomorphic section
with
. This section has a common point with each fiber
over
.
Since
is (up to a biholomorphic equivalence) a simply connected bounded Jordan domain
containing the origin, there is a holomorphic isotopy
with
. Using this isotopy, we define a homotopy
on
, which carries each point
to its image on the section
s passing from
x; that is,
where
is the common point of the fiber
and the selected section
s. The holomorphy of this homotopy in variables
for any fixed
follows from Lemmas 1, 2, and the Bers isomorphism theorem. The limit map
carries each fiber
to the initial half-plane
U.
There is a canonical holomorphic isotopy
of
U into its point corresponding to the origin of
. Now make
equal to
for
and equal to
for
and
.
This function is holomorphic at for any fixed and hence provides the desired holomorphic homotopy of the space into its base point.
- (b)
Case (dimension three). This case is more complicated.
We prescribe to each ordered sextuple
of distinct points the corresponding punctured sphere
and the two-sheeted closed hyperelliptic surface
of genus two with the branch points
. The corresponding Teichmüller spaces
and
coincide up to a natural biholomorphic isomorphism. Note also that the collection
provides the local complex coordinates on spaces
and
.
In view of the symmetry of hyperelliptic surfaces, it suffices to deal with the Beltrami differentials on , which are compatible with a conformal involution of , hence, satisfying . In other words, these are obtained by lifting to of the Beltrami coefficients on . This extends Lemma 2 and its consequences on holomorphy in the neighborhoods of the boundary interpolation points to the corresponding two-sheeted disks on hyperelliptic surfaces.
We fix a base point of
, determining a Fuchsian group
for which
. The corresponding Teichmüller curve
is a 4-dimensional, complex analytic manifold with projection
onto
such that for every
the fiber
is a hyperelliptic surface, determined by
(see
Section 2.4).
Due to assertion
of Lemma 3, this curve has, for any point
six distinct holomorphic sections
, corresponding to the Weierstrass points of the surface
, with
, and either from these sections has one common point with every fiber over
. We lift these sections to the Bers fiber space
covering
.
As mentioned in
Section 2.4, these sections are generated by the space
corresponding to the extension
of
, for which
is a subgroup of index two. Every section
acts on
via (6), where
is now the corresponding Weierstrass point of hyperelliptic surface
, and
is compatible with action (2) of the Bers isomorphism.
Thus each descends to a holomorphic map of the underlying space for the punctured spheres (10). We choose one from these maps and denote it by s.
The features of sections provide that the descended map s also determines, for each point , its unique image on every fiber with , and this image is the point .
The next preliminary construction consists of embedding space into , using the forgetting map (3). Its image is a connected submanifold in , and the corresponding fibers of the curve over the points are the surfaces with . The covering domains over these surfaces fill a submanifold , which is biholomorphically equivalent to the space .
Using the biholomorphic equivalence of space
to its image
in
, we carry over to
the result of the previous step
on the holomorphic contractibility of
, which provides a holomorphic homotopy
(here, stands for the origin of ).
Now we may construct the desired holomorphic homotopy of , contracting this space to its origin.
First, regarding
as the Bers fiber space
over
(whose fibers are the covers of surfaces
with collections of five punctures
), we apply homotopy (11) and define, for any pair
with
and
, the map
noting that the image point
is uniquely determined on surface
by map
s, as indicated above.
The pairs are located in the space and fill a three-dimensional submanifold biholomorphically equivalent to .
Homotopy (15) is well defined on and contracts the set into fiber over the base point. It is holomorphic with respect to the space variable for any fixed and continuous in both variables.
In view of the biholomorphic equivalence of to , (15) generates a holomorphic homotopy of the space onto the initial fiber (half-plane) U over the origin of .
It remains to combine this homotopy with the additional homotopy (12) of U into its point corresponding to the origin of . This provides the desired homotopy h and completes the proof of Theorem 1.