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The dynamical Manin–Mumford conjecture and the dynamical Bogomolov conjecture for endomorphisms of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 May 2018

Dragos Ghioca
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2, Canada email [email protected]
Khoa D. Nguyen
Affiliation:
University of Calgary, Mathematical Sciences Building MS 542, 2500 University Drive NW, Calgary, AB T2N 4T4, Canada email [email protected]
Hexi Ye
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, 310027, China email [email protected]
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Abstract

We prove Zhang’s dynamical Manin–Mumford conjecture and dynamical Bogomolov conjecture for dominant endomorphisms $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ . We use the equidistribution theorem for points of small height with respect to an algebraic dynamical system, combined with an analysis of the symmetries of the Julia set for a rational function.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The Authors 2018 

1 Introduction

1.1 Notation

As always in algebraic dynamics, given a self-map $f$ on a variety $X$ , we denote by $f^{n}$ its $n$ th iterate (for any non-negative integer $n$ , where $f^{0}$ denotes the identity map). We say that $x\in X$ is periodic if there exists $n\in \mathbb{N}$ such that $f^{n}(x)=x$ ; we call $x$ preperiodic if there exists $m\in \mathbb{N}$ such that $f^{m}(x)$ is periodic. Also, for a subvariety $V\subset X$ , we say that $V$ is periodic if $f^{n}(V)$ equals $V$ for some $n\in \mathbb{N}$ ; similarly, we say that $V$ is preperiodic if $f^{m}(V)$ is periodic.

1.2 The dynamical Manin–Mumford conjecture

Motivated by the classical Manin–Mumford conjecture (proved by Laurent [Reference LaurentLau84] in the case of tori, by Raynaud [Reference RaynaudRay83] in the case of abelian varieties and by McQuillan [Reference McQuillanMcQ95] in the general case of semi-abelian varieties), Zhang formulated a dynamical analogue of this conjecture (see [Reference ZhangZha06, Conjecture 1.2.1]) for polarizable endomorphisms of any projective variety. We say that an endomorphism $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ of a projective variety $X$ is polarizable if there exists an ample line bundle ${\mathcal{L}}$ on $X$ such that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}^{\ast }{\mathcal{L}}$ is linearly equivalent to ${\mathcal{L}}^{\otimes d}$ for some integer $d\geqslant 2$ . As initially conjectured by Zhang, one might expect that if $X$ is defined over a field $K$ of characteristic $0$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ is a polarizable endomorphism of $X$ , and the subvariety $V\subseteq X$ contains a Zariski dense set of preperiodic points, then $V$ is preperiodic. We prove that Zhang’s conjecture holds for dynamical systems $((\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n},\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7})$ , where $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ is given by the coordinatewise action

(1.2.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})\mapsto (f_{1}(x_{1}),\ldots ,f_{n}(x_{n})),\end{eqnarray}$$

where each rational function $f_{i}$ is not a Lattés map. A Lattés map $f:\mathbb{P}^{1}\longrightarrow \mathbb{P}^{1}$ is a rational function coming from the quotient of an affine map $L(z)=az+b$ on a torus ${\mathcal{T}}$ (elliptic curve), i.e. $f=\unicode[STIX]{x1D6E9}\circ L\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D6E9}^{-1}$ with $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6E9}:{\mathcal{T}}\rightarrow \mathbb{P}^{1}$ a finite-to-one holomorphic map; see [Reference MilnorMil04] by Milnor. We prove the following result.

Theorem 1.1. Let $f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n}\in \mathbb{C}(x)$ be rational functions of degree $d\geqslant 2$ , and let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}:(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ be given by their coordinatewise action as in (1.2.1). Assume that none of the rational functions $f_{i}$ is a Lattés map. If a subvariety $V\subseteq (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ contains a Zariski dense set of preperiodic points under the action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ , then $V$ is preperiodic.

We will prove Theorem 1.1 as a consequence of a more general statement, which we will state in § 1.3.

1.3 Statement of our main results

We first need to introduce the notion of exceptional rational functions; they are rational functions which commute with more functions of degree larger than one than a generic rational function does (note that generic rational functions commute only with their iterates). The first examples of such exceptional functions are the monomials $x^{d}$ , and then related to them we have the Chebyshev polynomials. The Chebyshev polynomial of degree $d$ is the unique polynomial $T_{d}$ with the property that for each $z\in \mathbb{C}$ , we have $T_{d}(z+1/z)=z^{d}+1/z^{d}$ . For two rational functions $f$ and $g$ , we say they are (linearly) conjugate if there exists an automorphism $\unicode[STIX]{x1D702}$ of $\mathbb{P}^{1}$ such that $f=\unicode[STIX]{x1D702}^{-1}\circ g\,\circ \,\unicode[STIX]{x1D702}$ . We call exceptional any rational map of degree $d>1$ which is conjugate either to $z^{\pm d}$ , or to $\pm T_{d}(z)$ , or to a Lattés map.

We prove the following result.

Theorem 1.2. Let $n$ be a positive integer, let $f_{i}\in \mathbb{C}(x)$ (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ) be non-exceptional rational functions of degree $d_{i}\geqslant 2$ , and let $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ be an irreducible subvariety defined over  $\mathbb{C}$ . Assume:

  1. (1) either that $V$ contains a Zariski dense set of preperiodic points under the action of $(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})\mapsto (f_{1}(x_{1}),\ldots ,f_{n}(x_{n}))$ and that $d_{1}=d_{2}=\cdots =d_{n}$ ;

  2. (2) or that $f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n}\in \bar{\mathbb{Q}}(x)$ , that $V$ is defined over $\bar{\mathbb{Q}}$ , and that there exists a Zariski dense sequence of points $(x_{1,i},\ldots ,x_{n,i})\in V(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ such that $\lim _{i\rightarrow \infty }\sum _{j=1}^{n}\widehat{h}_{f_{j}}(x_{j,i})=0$ , where $\widehat{h}_{f_{j}}$ is the canonical height with respect to the rational function $f_{j}$ .

Then there exists a finite set $S$ of tuples

$$\begin{eqnarray}(i,j)\in \{1,\ldots ,n\}\times \{1,\ldots ,n\}\end{eqnarray}$$

along with $(\ell _{i},\ell _{j})\in \mathbb{N}\times \mathbb{N}$ and curves $C_{i,j}\subset \mathbb{P}^{1}\times \mathbb{P}^{1}$ which are preperiodic under the coordinatewise action $(x_{i},x_{j})\mapsto (f_{i}^{\ell _{i}}(x_{i}),f_{j}^{\ell _{j}}(x_{j}))$ such that:

  1. (i) $\deg (f_{i}^{\ell _{i}})=\deg (f_{j}^{\ell _{j}})$ ; and

  2. (ii) $V$ is an irreducible component of

    (1.3.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\mathop{\bigcap }_{(i,j)\in S}\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{i,j}^{-1}(C_{i,j}),\end{eqnarray}$$
    where $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{i,j}:(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{2}$ is the projection on the $(i,j)$ th coordinate axes for each $(i,j)\in S$ .

Our Theorem 1.2 answers Zhang’s dynamical Manin–Mumford conjecture (over $\mathbb{C}$ ) and a slightly more general form of Zhang’s dynamical Bogomolov conjecture (over $\bar{\mathbb{Q}}$ ) for endomorphisms of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ (see [Reference ZhangZha06, Conjectures 1.2.1 and 4.1.7]). Note that any dominant (regular) endomorphism of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ has an iterate which is of the form

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}:=(f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n}):(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n};\end{eqnarray}$$

see also [Reference Ghioca, Nguyen and YeGNY17, Remark 1.2]. Our result is slightly stronger than the one conjectured in [Reference ZhangZha06] since in part (2) of Theorem 1.2 we do not assume the endomorphism $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}=(f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n})$ is necessarily polarizable (i.e., the rational maps $f_{i}$ might have different degrees). On the other hand, we exclude the case when functions $f_{i}$ are conjugate to monomials, $\pm$ Chebyshev polynomials, or Lattés maps since in those cases there are counterexamples to a formulation when $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ is not polarizable (see [Reference Ghioca, Tucker and ZhangGTZ11] and [Reference Ghioca, Nguyen and YeGNY17, Remark 1.2]). Moreover, if at least two of the maps $f_{i}$ are Lattés, then even assuming $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ is polarizable, one would still have to impose an additional condition in order to get that the subvariety $V$ is preperiodic (see [Reference Ghioca, Tucker and ZhangGTZ11, Theorem 1.2]). In our next result (see Theorem 1.3) we prove the appropriately modified statement of the dynamical Manin–Mumford conjecture (as formulated in [Reference Ghioca, Tucker and ZhangGTZ11, Conjecture 2.4]) for all polarizable endomorphisms of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ .

Theorem 1.3. Let $n\in \mathbb{N}$ , let $f_{i}\in \mathbb{C}(x)$ (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ) be rational functions of degree $d>1$ , let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}:(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ be defined by

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})=(f_{1}(x_{1}),\ldots ,f_{n}(x_{n}))\end{eqnarray}$$

and let $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ be an irreducible subvariety. Assume there exists a Zariski dense set of smooth points $P=(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n})\in V(\mathbb{C})$ which are preperiodic under $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ and moreover such that the tangent space $T_{V,P}$ of $V$ at $P$ is preperiodic under the induced action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ on $\text{Gr}_{\dim (V)}(T_{(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n},P})$ , where $\text{Gr}_{\dim (V)}(T_{(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n},P})$ is the corresponding Grassmannian. Then the subvariety $V$ must be preperiodic under the action of   $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ .

1.4 Brief history of previous results towards the dynamical Manin–Mumford conjecture and the dynamical Bogomolov conjecture

Motivated by the classical Bogomolov conjecture (proved by Ullmo [Reference UllmoUll98] in the case of curves embedded in their Jacobian and by Zhang [Reference ZhangZha98] in the general case of abelian varieties), Zhang formulated a dynamical analogue also for this conjecture (see [Reference ZhangZha06, Conjecture 4.1.7]) for polarizable endomorphisms $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ of any projective variety $X$ . So, if $X$ is defined over a number field $K$ then one can construct the canonical height $\widehat{h}_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}}$ for all points in $X(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ with respect to the action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ (see [Reference Call and SilvermanCS93] and also our § 3.4) and then Zhang’s dynamical version of the Bogomolov conjecture asks that if a subvariety $V\subseteq X$ is not preperiodic, then there exists $\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}>0$ with the property that the set of points $x\in V(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ such that $\widehat{h}_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}}(x)<\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}$ is not Zariski dense in $V$ . Since all preperiodic points have canonical height equal to $0$ , the dynamical Bogomolov conjecture is a generalization of the dynamical Manin–Mumford conjecture when the algebraic dynamical system $(X,\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7})$ is defined over a number field.

Besides the case of abelian varieties $X$ endowed with the multiplication-by- $2$ map $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ (which motivated Zhang’s conjectures), there are known only a handful of special cases of the dynamical Manin–Mumford or the dynamical Bogomolov conjectures. All of these partial results are for curves contained in $\mathbb{P}^{1}\times \mathbb{P}^{1}$ (see [Reference Baker and HsiaBH05, Reference Ghioca and TuckerGT10, Reference Ghioca, Tucker and ZhangGTZ11, Reference Ghioca, Nguyen and YeGNY17]). We also mention here the paper of Dujardin and Favre [Reference Dujardin and FavreDF17] who prove a result for plane polynomial automorphisms motivated by Zhang’s dynamical Manin–Mumford conjecture. Our Theorem 1.2 is the first result towards the dynamical Manin–Mumford and the dynamical Bogomolov conjectures for higher dimensional subvarieties of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ .

The case $n=2$ in Theorems 1.2 and 1.3 (i.e., $V$ is a curve in $\mathbb{P}^{1}\times \mathbb{P}^{1}$ ) was established in [Reference Ghioca, Nguyen and YeGNY17, Theorems 1.1 and 1.3]. Even though the general strategy in our present proof follows the one we employed in [Reference Ghioca, Nguyen and YeGNY17], there are significant new obstacles that we need to overcome; for more details, see § 2.4.

1.5 Preperiodic subvarieties

The conclusion from Theorem 1.2 covers the main result of Medvedev’s PhD thesis [Reference MedvedevMed07] (whose main findings were published in [Reference Medvedev and ScanlonMS14, Proposition 2.21]) who showed that any invariant subvariety $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ under the coordinatewise action of $n$ non-exceptional rational functions must have the form (1.3.1). Our result is stronger than the results from [Reference MedvedevMed07, Reference Medvedev and ScanlonMS14] since we only assume that a subvariety $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ contains a Zariski dense set of preperiodic points under the action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}:=(f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n})$ and then we derive that $V$ must have the form (1.3.1) (see also our Theorem 1.4). Medvedev and Scanlon assume that $V$ is invariant by $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ (or more generally, preperiodic under the action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ ) and then using the model theory of difference fields, they conclude that $V$ must have the form (1.3.1). We do not use model theory; instead, we use algebraic geometry (including the powerful arithmetic Hodge index theorem of Yuan and Zhang [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZ17]) coupled with a careful analysis for the local symmetries of the Julia set of a rational function. We state below our formal result which covers the main result of [Reference MedvedevMed07] thus providing the form of any preperiodic subvariety in $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ under the split action of $n$ non-exceptional rational functions.

Theorem 1.4. Let $n\in \mathbb{N}$ , let $f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n}\in \mathbb{C}(x)$ be non-exceptional rational functions of degrees ${>}1$ , and let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ be their coordinatewise action on $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ . If $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is a preperiodic subvariety under the action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ , then there exists a finite set $S$ of pairs $(i,j)\in \{1,\ldots ,n\}\times \{1,\ldots ,n\}$ along with curves $C_{i,j}\subset \mathbb{P}^{1}\times \mathbb{P}^{1}$ which are preperiodic under the coordinate wise action $(x_{i},x_{j})\mapsto (f_{i}(x_{i}),f_{j}(x_{j}))$ such that $V$ is an irreducible component of $\bigcap _{(i,j)\in S}\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{i,j}^{-1}(C_{i,j})$ , where $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{i,j}:(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{2}$ is the projection on the $(i,j)$ th coordinate axes.

1.6 The dynamical Pink–Zilber conjecture

Analogous to asking the dynamical Manin–Mumford conjecture as a dynamical variant of the classical Manin–Mumford conjecture, one could formulate a dynamical Pink–Zilber conjecture, at least in the case of split endomorphisms. The following statement is implicitly raised in [Reference Ghioca and NguyenGN16].

Conjecture 1.5. Let $n\in \mathbb{N}$ , let $f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n}\in \mathbb{C}(x)$ be non-exceptional rational functions of degrees ${>}1$ , and let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}:(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ be their coordinatewise action $(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})\mapsto (f_{1}(x_{1}),\ldots ,f_{n}(x_{n}))$ . For each $m\in \{0,\ldots ,n\}$ , we let $\text{Per}^{[m]}$ be the union of all irreducible subvarieties of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ of codimension $m$ , which are periodic under the action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ . If $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is an irreducible subvariety which is not contained in a proper periodic subvariety of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ , then $V\,\cap \,\operatorname{Per}^{[\dim (V)+1]}$ is not Zariski dense in $V$ .

We exclude exceptional rational functions in Conjecture 1.5 since in those cases we rediscover the classical Pink–Zilber conjecture; for more details on the Pink–Zilber conjecture, see [Reference ZannierZan12].

In Conjecture 1.5, if $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is an irreducible hypersurface, then we recover essentially the dynamical Manin–Mumford conjecture we proved in Theorem 1.2. Quite interestingly, the same Theorem 1.2 can be used (along with other results) in order to solve Conjecture 1.5 if $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ has dimension $1$ or codimension $2$ and each $f_{i}$ is a polynomial defined over $\bar{\mathbb{Q}}$ (see the forthcoming paper A dynamical variant of the Pink–Zilber conjecture by Ghioca and Nguyen).

1.7 Plan for our paper

In § 2 we show that in order to prove Theorems 1.11.2 and 1.3, it suffices to assume that $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is a hypersurface which projects dominantly onto any subset of $(n-1)$ coordinate axes of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ . Thus we are left to prove our results for hypersurfaces $H$ (see Theorem 2.2), which will be done over the remaining sections of our paper; the conclusion in Theorem 1.4 will follow from the ingredients we develop for proving Theorem 1.2.

In §§ 3 and 4 we set up our notation, state basic properties for the Julia set of a rational function, construct the heights associated with an algebraic dynamical system and define adelic metrized line bundles which are employed in the main equidistribution result (Theorem 4.1). We note that Theorem 4.1 (of Yuan [Reference YuanYua08]) is a crucial ingredient in our proof. In § 5 we prove that under the hypotheses of Theorem 2.2, the measures induced on the hypersuface $H\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ from the dynamical systems

$$\begin{eqnarray}((\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1},f_{1}\times \cdots \times f_{i-1}\times f_{i+1}\times \cdots \times f_{n})\end{eqnarray}$$

are all equal (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ). Also, in § 5 we prove Proposition 5.2, which is a crucial step in our proof of our main results (for more details on this step and also on our overall proof strategy, see § 2.4).

In § 6 we show how to use the equality of the above measures to infer the preperiodicity of $H$ , assuming also that $H$ satisfies an additional technical hypothesis (see Theorem 6.1). In § 7 we finalize the proof of Theorem 2.2 (and thus finish our proof for Theorems 1.11.2 and 1.3). We conclude our paper by proving Theorem 1.4.

2 Reduction to the case of hypersurfaces

In this section we present various reductions which we will employ in proving Theorems 1.1, 1.2 and 1.3. We also provide additional details regarding the overall strategy for our proof.

2.1 Some reductions

We start with the following important reduction.

Proposition 2.1. It suffices to prove Theorems 1.11.2 and 1.3 under the additional hypothesis that $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is a hypersurface which projects dominantly onto any subset of $n-1$ coordinate axes.

Proof. First we prove that it suffices to assume in each of the Theorems 1.11.2 and 1.3 that $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is a hypersurface. Indeed, we assume Theorems 1.11.2 and 1.3 hold for all hypersurfaces and we derive the same conclusion for all subvarieties of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ . So, let $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ be an irreducible subvariety of dimension $D<n-1$ satisfying the hypotheses of either Theorem 1.1, or of Theorem 1.3, or hypothesis (1) (or (2)) of Theorem 1.2. Then there exist $D$ coordinate axes (without loss of generality, we assume they are $x_{1},\ldots ,x_{D}$ ) so that the projection $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}$ of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ onto its first $D$ coordinate axes remains dominant when restricted to $V$ . For each $j=D+1,\ldots ,n$ , we let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{j}$ be the natural projection map of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ on coordinates $x_{1},\ldots ,x_{D},x_{j}$ , and we let $H_{j}:=\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{j}(V)$ . Then $H_{j}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{D+1}$ is a hypersurface satisfying the hypotheses of Theorem 1.1, or of Theorem 1.3, or hypothesis (1) (or (2)) of Theorem 1.2 with respect to the coordinatewise action of the rational functions $f_{1},\ldots ,f_{D},f_{j}$ . Furthermore, for each $j=D+1,\ldots ,n$ , we let $\tilde{H}_{j}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ be the hypersurface $H_{j}\times (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-D-1}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ (i.e., we insert a copy of $\mathbb{P}^{1}$ on each coordinate axis not included in the set $\{1,\ldots ,D,j\}$ ). Then also $\tilde{H}_{j}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is a hypersurface satisfying the hypotheses of either one of the three Theorems 1.11.2 or 1.3. Let

(2.1.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\tilde{H}:=\mathop{\bigcap }_{j=D+1}^{n}\tilde{H}_{j};\end{eqnarray}$$

clearly, $V\subset \tilde{H}$ and so, $D=\dim (V)\leqslant \dim (\tilde{H})$ .

Since $\dim (V)=D$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}|_{V}:V\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{D}$ is a dominant morphism, then we conclude that there exists a Zariski open subset $U\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{D}$ such that for each $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}\in U$ , the fibre $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}^{-1}(\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC})$ is finite. Therefore for each $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}\in U$ and for each $j=D+1,\ldots ,n$ , we have that there exists a finite set $S_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC},j}$ with the property that if $(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n})\in \tilde{H}_{j}$ and $(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{D})=\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}$ , then $a_{j}\in S_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC},j}$ . Thus for each $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}\in U$ , we have that there exist finitely many points $(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n})\in \tilde{H}$ such that $(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{D})=\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}$ . Hence $V$ is an irreducible component of $\tilde{H}$ ; moreover, any irreducible component $W$ of $\tilde{H}$ for which $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}|_{W}:W\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{D}$ is a dominant morphism has dimension $D$ .

If Theorem 1.2 holds for hypersurfaces, then each hypersurface $\tilde{H}_{j}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ must have the form (1.3.1) since each one of these hypersurfaces satisfies the hypotheses of Theorem 1.2. Actually, since each $\tilde{H}_{j}$ is a hypersurface, then we must have

$$\begin{eqnarray}\tilde{H}_{j}=\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{i,j}^{-1}(C_{i,j})\end{eqnarray}$$

for some curve $C_{i,j}\subset \mathbb{P}^{1}\times \mathbb{P}^{1}$ , which is preperiodic under the action of $(x_{i},x_{j})\mapsto (f_{i}^{\ell _{i}}(x_{i}),f_{j}^{\ell _{j}}(x_{j}))$ for some $\ell _{i},\ell _{j}\in \mathbb{N}$ with the property that $\deg (f_{i}^{\ell _{i}})=\deg (f_{j}^{\ell _{j}})$ . Because $V$ is an irreducible component of $\tilde{H}$ (see (2.1.1)), we obtain the desired conclusion in Theorem 1.2.

Now, if Theorems 1.1 or 1.3 hold for hypersurfaces, then each hypersurface $\tilde{H}_{j}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is preperiodic under the action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}:=(f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n})$ . Thus, also $\tilde{H}$ is preperiodic under the action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ (see (2.1.1)). Combining the following facts:

  • $\tilde{H}$ is preperiodic;

  • $V$ is an irreducible component of $\tilde{H}$ ;

  • each irreducible component $W$ of $\tilde{H}$ for which $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}|_{W}:W\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{D}$ is a dominant morphism has dimension $D$ ; and

  • each variety $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}^{m}(V)$ (for $m\in \mathbb{N}$ ) projects dominantly onto $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{D}$ ,

we obtain that $V$ itself must be preperiodic under the action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ , as desired.

Now, once we reduced proving Theorems 1.11.2 and 1.3 to the case $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is a hypersurface, we can reduce further to the special case when $V$ projects dominantly onto each subset of $(n-1)$ coordinate axes. Indeed, assuming otherwise, then (without loss of generality) we may assume $V=\mathbb{P}^{1}\times V_{0}$ for some hypersurface $V_{0}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ . Therefore, it suffices to prove Theorems 1.2 and 1.3 for the subvariety $V_{0}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ under the coordinatewise action of the rational functions $f_{2},\ldots ,f_{n}$ . A simple induction on $n$ finishes our proof. (Finally, as an aside, we observe that in light of [Reference Ghioca, Nguyen and YeGNY17, Theorem 1.1], then due to the reduction proved in Proposition 2.1, we have that Theorem 1.2 is equivalent with proving that if $n>2$ and also if each $f_{i}$ is non-exceptional, then there is no hypersurface $H\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ projecting dominantly onto each subset of $(n-1)$ coordinate axes of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ such that $H$ contains a Zariski dense set of preperiodic points; this is exactly what we will be proving in Theorems 2.2 and 6.1.)◻

2.2 A technical result

The next result (proven in § 7) in conjunction with [Reference Ghioca, Nguyen and YeGNY17, Theorems 1.1 and 1.3] yields the conclusions of each of the three Theorems 1.11.2 and 1.3.

Theorem 2.2. Let $n>2$ be an integer, let $f_{i}\in \mathbb{C}(x)$ of degree $d_{i}\geqslant 2$ (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ) and let $H\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ be an irreducible hypersurface projecting dominantly onto each subset of $(n-1)$ coordinate axes. If there is a Zariski dense sequence of points $(x_{1,i},\ldots ,x_{n,i})\in V(\mathbb{C})$ such that:

  1. (1) either each $(x_{1,i},\ldots ,x_{n,i})$ is preperiodic under the coordinatewise action of $(f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n})$ and also $d_{1}=d_{2}=\cdots =d_{n}$ ;

  2. (2) or each $f_{i}\in \bar{\mathbb{Q}}(x)$ (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ), $V$ is defined over $\bar{\mathbb{Q}}$ and $\lim _{i\rightarrow \infty }\sum _{j=1}^{n}\widehat{h}_{f_{j}}(x_{j,i})=0$ ,

then the following must hold:

  1. (i) either each $f_{i}(x)$ is conjugate to $x^{\pm d_{i}}$ or to $\pm T_{d_{i}}(x)$ ;

  2. (ii) or each $f_{i}$ is a Lattès map (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ).

2.3 Our main results as consequences of the technical result

We show next how to derive Theorems 1.11.2 and 1.3 from Theorem 2.2.

Proof of Theorem 1.2.

As shown in Proposition 2.1, it suffices to prove Theorem 1.2 for irreducible hypersurfaces $V$ , which project dominantly onto each subset of $(n-1)$ coordinate axes of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ . Since no $f_{i}$ is exceptional, then Theorem 2.2 yields that the case of such hypersurfaces is vacuously true when $n>2$ . The case of curves $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{2}$ is proven in [Reference Ghioca, Nguyen and YeGNY17, Theorem 1.1], which concludes our proof.◻

Since both Theorems 1.1 and 1.3 have similar statements and proofs, we will show next in parallel how to derive these two results from Theorem 2.2.

Proof of both Theorems 1.1 and 1.3.

Again using Proposition 2.1, it suffices to prove Theorems 1.1 and 1.3 for irreducible hypersurfaces $V$ , which project dominantly onto each subset of $(n-1)$ coordinate axes of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ . The case $n=2$ in Theorem 1.3 was already proven in [Reference Ghioca, Nguyen and YeGNY17, Theorem 1.3]. On the other hand, note that [Reference Ghioca, Nguyen and YeGNY17, Equation (11)] yields that for a plane curve (neither horizontal, nor vertical) which contains infinitely many preperiodic points under the coordinatewise action of two rational functions $f_{1}$ and $f_{2}$ , if $f_{1}$ is conjugate to a monomial or $\pm$ Chebyshev polynomial, then $f_{2}$ must also be conjugated to a monomial or $\pm$ Chebyshev polynomial. Furthermore, if we assume $n>2$ , then Theorem 2.2 yields that:

  1. (i) either for each $i=1,\ldots ,n$ we have that $f_{i}(x)=\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}_{i}^{-1}(x)\circ x^{\pm d}\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D708}_{i}(x)$ or $f_{i}(x)=\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}_{i}^{-1}(x)\circ (\pm T_{d}(x))\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D708}_{i}(x)$ for some automorphisms $\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}_{i}:\mathbb{P}^{1}\longrightarrow \mathbb{P}^{1}$ ;

  2. (ii) or each $f_{i}$ is a Lattès map corresponding to some elliptic curve $E_{i}$ (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ).

Therefore, from now on, we work in both Theorems 1.1 and 1.3 under the assumption that either hypotheses (i) or (ii) above are met.

If condition (i) is satisfied, then at the expense of replacing $V$ by $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}}(V)$ , where $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}}$ is the automorphism of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ given by

$$\begin{eqnarray}\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}}(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n}):=(\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}_{1}(x_{1}),\ldots ,\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}_{n}(x_{n})),\end{eqnarray}$$

we may assume that each $f_{i}(x)$ is either $x^{\pm d}$ or $\pm T_{d}(x)$ . Next, let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}:\mathbb{G}_{m}^{n}\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ be the morphism given by

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})=:(\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{1}(x_{1}),\ldots ,\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{n}(x_{n})),\end{eqnarray}$$

for rational functions $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{i}$ which are:

  • $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{i}(x)=x$ if $f_{i}(x)=x^{\pm d}$ ; and

  • $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{i}(x)=x+(1/x)$ if $f_{i}(x)=\pm T_{d}(x).$

Then there exists an irreducible subvariety $W$ of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}^{-1}(V)\subset \mathbb{G}_{m}^{n}$ (projecting dominantly onto $V$ through the map $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}$ ), which contains a Zariski dense set of preperiodic points under the action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}:\mathbb{G}_{m}^{n}\longrightarrow \mathbb{G}_{m}^{n}$ given by

$$\begin{eqnarray}(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})\mapsto (\pm x_{1}^{\pm d},\ldots ,\pm x_{n}^{\pm d}).\end{eqnarray}$$

Hence, $W$ contains a Zariski dense set of torsion points of $\mathbb{G}_{m}^{n}$ . Laurent’s theorem [Reference LaurentLau84] (the original Manin–Mumford conjecture for tori) yields that $W$ is a subtorus, thus preperiodic under the action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ . This proves that $V=\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}(W)$ is preperiodic under the action of

$$\begin{eqnarray}(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})\mapsto (f_{1}(x_{1}),\ldots ,f_{n}(x_{n})),\end{eqnarray}$$

as desired in the conclusion of Theorem 1.1. Furthermore, we note that in this case, the conclusion of Theorem 1.3 holds without the extra hypothesis regarding the preperiodicity of the tangent subspaces under the corresponding induced action; we will only need this extra assumption when dealing with hypothesis (ii) above, i.e., when the maps are Lattés.

Now, we assume condition (ii) is verified and so, each $f_{i}$ is a Lattès map which satisfies $p_{i}\,\circ \,\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}_{i}=f_{i}\circ p_{i}$ where $p_{i}:E_{i}\longrightarrow \mathbb{P}^{1}$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}_{i}:E_{i}\longrightarrow E_{i}$ are morphisms satisfying $\deg (\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}_{1})=\deg (\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}_{2})=\cdots =\deg (\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}_{n})$ because the Lattès maps $f_{i}$ have the same degree. Then there exists an irreducible component $W$ of $p^{-1}(V)\subset \tilde{E}:=\prod _{i=1}^{n}E_{i}$ (where $p:\tilde{E}\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is the morphism given by $p_{1}\times \cdots \times p_{n}$ ) with the property that it contains a Zariski dense set of (smooth) points $P$ which are preperiodic under the action of the endomorphism $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}}$ of $\tilde{E}$ given by $\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}_{1}\times \cdots \times \unicode[STIX]{x1D713}_{n}$ , and moreover, the tangent space of $W$ at $P$ is preperiodic under the induced action of $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}}$ on $\text{Gr}_{\dim (W)}(T_{\tilde{E},P})$ , where $T_{\tilde{E},P}$ is the tangent space of $\tilde{E}$ at $P$ and $\text{Gr}_{\dim (W)}(T_{\tilde{E},P})$ is the corresponding Grassmannian. Since each $\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}_{i}$ is an isogeny of $E_{i}$ of same degree, we get that $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}}$ is a polarizable endomorphism of $\tilde{E}$ and so, [Reference Ghioca, Tucker and ZhangGTZ11, Theorem 2.1] yields that $W$ is preperiodic under the action of $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}}$ . Therefore $V=p(W)$ is preperiodic under the action of

$$\begin{eqnarray}(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})\mapsto (f_{1}(x_{1}),\ldots ,f_{n}(x_{n})),\end{eqnarray}$$

as desired in the conclusion of Theorem 1.3.◻

2.4 Strategy for our proof

The remaining sections of our paper are dedicated to proving Theorem 2.2. The setup is as follows:

  • $n>2$ and $H\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is a hypersurface projecting dominantly onto each subset of $(n-1)$ coordinate axes;

  • $f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n}$ are rational functions of degrees larger than $1$ acting coordinatewise on $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ ; and

  • $H$ contains a Zariski dense set either of preperiodic points or of points of small height (see (2) in Theorem 1.2) under the action of $(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})\mapsto (f_{1}(x_{1}),\ldots ,f_{n}(x_{n}))$ .

If at least one of the functions $f_{i}$ is not exceptional, then we will derive a contradiction. Now, if some $f_{i}$ is conjugated to a monomial or $\pm$ Chebyshev polynomial, then we prove that each of the $n$ rational functions must be conjugated to a monomial or $\pm$ Chebyshev polynomial. Similarly, if one of the functions $f_{i}$ is a Lattés map, then we prove that each $f_{i}$ must be a Lattés map. We obtain this goal (see Theorem 6.1) by showing a similitude between the Julia sets of each one of the rational functions $f_{i}$ . In turn, the relation between the Julia sets is a consequence of a powerful equidistribution theorem for points of small height.

More precisely, using the equidistribution theorem of [Reference YuanYua08] for points of small height on a variety (see [Reference Chambert-LoirCha06] for the case of curves and also [Reference Baker and RumelyBR06] and [Reference Favre and Rivera-LetelierFR06] for the case of $\mathbb{P}^{1}$ ), we prove that under the above hypotheses for $H$ and $f_{i}$ , then the measures $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}$ induced on $H$ by the invariant measures corresponding to the dynamical systems

$$\begin{eqnarray}((\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1},f_{1}\times \cdots \times f_{i-1}\times f_{i+1}\times \cdots \times f_{n})\end{eqnarray}$$

are equal (for each $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ). Using a careful study of the local analytic maps which preserve (locally) the Julia set of a rational map (which is not exceptional), we obtain the conclusion of Theorem 1.2. Even though our arguments resemble the ones we employed in [Reference Ghioca, Nguyen and YeGNY17] to treat the case of plane curves (i.e., $n=2$ ), there are significant new complications in our analysis.

Indeed, using Yuan’s arithmetic equidistribution theorem [Reference YuanYua08] for points with small height on a space of dimension $n\geqslant 2$ , we first get connections for the $(n-1,n-1)$ -currents (coming from dynamics) on a hypersurface $H\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ . From these connections, we are able to construct many symmetries for the aforementioned $(n-1,n-1)$ -current. A further analysis of the symmetries for such an $(n-1,n-1)$ -current yields additional symmetries of the Julia set on the one-dimensional slices of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ . Applying the rigidity of the symmetries of the Julia set on the one-dimensional slices, we are able to derive the rigidity of the symmetries of the entire $(n-1,n-1)$ -current, from which we derive the desired conclusion regarding $H$ and the dynamical system $(f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n})$ (see the proof of Theorem 6.1). It is precisely the study of the rigidity of this $(n-1,n-1)$ -current (for $n>2$ ) which provides the new proof of Medvedev’s result [Reference MedvedevMed07], which otherwise could not have been obtained from the arguments from our previous paper [Reference Ghioca, Nguyen and YeGNY17].

Also, in order to finish the proof of Theorem 2.2 by showing that the hypotheses of Theorem 6.1 are met, we need to know that for a hypersurface $H\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ as in Theorem 2.2, for each point $(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n})\in H$ ,

(2.4.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\text{if }a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n-1}\text{ are preperiodic, then also }a_{n}\text{ is preperiodic}.\end{eqnarray}$$

If $n=2$ , this fact was known for quite some time (see [Reference MimarMim13] which publishes the findings of Mimar’s PhD thesis [Reference MimarMim97] from 20 years ago). However, if $n>2$ , in order to prove (2.4.1) (see our Proposition 5.2 in the case each $f_{i}$ and also $H$ are defined over $\bar{\mathbb{Q}}$ ), we need to use arithmetic versions of the Hodge index theorem proved by Faltings [Reference FaltingsFal84] and by Hriljac [Reference HriljacHri85] for arithmetic surfaces and proved by Moriwaki [Reference MoriwakiMor96] for higher dimensional arithmetic varieties, and also, we use crucially the new arithmetic Hodge index theorem proved by Yuan and Zhang [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZ17]. Furthermore, in order to derive (2.4.1) in the general case (over $\mathbb{C}$ ) we need a specialization argument based on a result of Yuan and Zhang [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZa, Reference Yuan and ZhangYZb] regarding the specialization of a Zariski dense set of preperiodic points for a polarizable endomorphism defined over a base curve.

3 Complex dynamics and height functions

In this section, we introduce the Julia set of a rational function, some of its properties and also the arithmetic height functions associated with an algebraic dynamical system.

3.1 The Julia set

Let $f:\mathbb{P}^{1}\rightarrow \mathbb{P}^{1}$ be a rational function defined over $\mathbb{C}$ of degree $d_{f}\geqslant 2$ . The Julia set $J_{f}$ is the set of points $x\in \mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}}^{1}$ for which the dynamics is chaotic under the iteration of $f$ . The Julia set $J_{f}$ is closed, non-empty and invariant under $f$ . Let $x$ be a periodic point in a cycle of exact period $n$ ; then the multiplier $\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}$ of this cycle (or of the periodic point $x$ ) is the derivative of $f^{n}$ at $x$ . A cycle is repelling if its multiplier has an absolute value greater than $1$ . All but finitely many cycles of $f$ are repelling, and repelling cycles are in the Julia set $J_{f}$ . Locally, at a repelling fixed point $x$ with multiplier $\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}$ , we can conjugate $f$ to the linear map $z\rightarrow \unicode[STIX]{x1D706}\cdot z$ near $z=0$ (note that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}\neq 0$ since the point is assumed to be repelling). For more details about the dynamics of a rational function, we refer the reader to Milnor’s book [Reference MilnorMil00].

There is a probability measure $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f}$ on $\mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}}^{1}$ associated with $f$ , which is the unique $f$ -invariant measure achieving maximal entropy $\log d_{f}$ ; see [Reference BrolinBro65, Reference LyubichLyu83, Reference Freire, Lopes and MañéFLM83, Reference MañéMañ83]. Also $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f}$ is the unique measure satisfying

(3.1.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f}(f(A))=d_{f}\cdot \unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f}(A)\end{eqnarray}$$

for any Borel set $A\subset \mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}}^{1}$ with $f$ injective when restricted on $A$ . The support of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f}$ is $J_{f}$ , and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f}(x)=0$ for any $x\in \mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}}^{1}$ . Moreover, $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f}$ has continuous potential, in the sense that locally there is a continuous subharmonic function $u(x)$ such that the $(1,1)$ -current satisfies

$$\begin{eqnarray}dd^{c}u(x)=d\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f}(x),\end{eqnarray}$$

and then (3.1.1) is equivalent to

$$\begin{eqnarray}dd^{c}u\circ f(x)=d_{f}\cdot d\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f}(x).\end{eqnarray}$$

3.2 Measures on a hypersurface associated with a dynamical system

Let

$$\begin{eqnarray}\hat{f}(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n}):=(f_{1}(x_{1}),\ldots ,f_{n}(x_{n}))\end{eqnarray}$$

be an endormorphism of $(\mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}}^{1})^{n}$ with $f_{i}$ being a rational function of degree $d_{i}\geqslant 2$ for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n$ . For $i=1,\ldots ,n$ , denote

(3.2.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\tilde{f}_{i}:=(f_{1},\ldots ,f_{i-1},f_{i+1},\ldots ,f_{n})\end{eqnarray}$$

as an endormorphism of $(\mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}}^{1})^{n-1}$ with invariant measure

(3.2.2) $$\begin{eqnarray}\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}:=\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{1}}\times \cdots \unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{i-1}}\times \unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{i+1}}\times \cdots \unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{n}}.\end{eqnarray}$$

Let $H\subset (\mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}}^{1})^{n}$ be an irreducible hypersurface projecting dominantly onto any subset of $(n-1)$ coordinates, i.e., the canonical projections $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}:(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}\rightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ (where for each $i=1,\ldots ,n$ , $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}$ is the projection of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ onto the $(n-1)$ coordinates forgetting the $i$ th coordinate axis) restrict to dominant morphisms $(\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i})|_{H}:H\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ . By abuse of notation, we denote the restriction $(\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i})|_{H}$ also by $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}$ . We define probability measures $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}$ (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ) on $H$ corresponding to the dynamical system $((\mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}}^{1})^{n-1},\tilde{f}_{i})$ . More precisely, for each $i=1,\ldots ,n$ , we pullback $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}$ by $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}$ to get a measure $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}^{\ast }\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{i}$ on $H$ so that

$$\begin{eqnarray}\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}^{\ast }\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}(A):=\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}(\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}(A))\end{eqnarray}$$

for any Borel set $A\subset H$ such that $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}$ is injective on $A$ . Another way to interpret this is that for $t=(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})\in H$ , we have that $d(\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}^{\ast }\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i})(t)$ is an $(n-1,n-1)$ -current on $H$ given by

$$\begin{eqnarray}d\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}^{\ast }\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}(t)=dd^{c}u_{1}(x_{1})\wedge \cdots \wedge dd^{c}u_{i-1}(x_{i-1})\wedge dd^{c}u_{i+1}(x_{i+1})\wedge \cdots \wedge dd^{c}u_{n}(x_{n}),\end{eqnarray}$$

where $u_{j}$ is a locally defined continuous subharmonic function with $dd^{c}u_{j}=d\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{j}}$ for each $j=1,\ldots ,n$ . Hence we get the probability measures on $H$ :

$$\begin{eqnarray}\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}:=\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}^{\ast }\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}/\text{deg}(\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i})\quad \text{for }i=1,\ldots ,n.\end{eqnarray}$$

Similarly, one has that

$$\begin{eqnarray}\tilde{f}_{i}^{\ast }\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}=d_{1}\cdots d_{i-1}\cdot d_{i+1}\cdots d_{n}\cdot \tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}\quad \text{for }i=1,\ldots ,n.\end{eqnarray}$$

3.3 Symmetries of the Julia set

Let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}$ be a meromorphic function on some disc $B(a,r)$ of radius $r$ centred at a point $a\in J_{f}$ . We say that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}$ is a symmetry on $J_{f}$ if it satisfies the following properties:

  • $x\in B(a,r)\cap J_{f}$ if and only if $\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}(x)\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D701}(B(a,r))\cap J_{f}$ ; and

  • if $J_{f}$ is either a circle, a line segment, or the entire sphere, there is a constant $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}>0$ such that for any Borel set $A$ where $\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}|_{A}$ is injective, one has $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f}(\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}(A))=\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}\cdot \unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f}(A)$ .

A family ${\mathcal{S}}$ of symmetries of $J_{f}$ on $B(a,r)$ is said to be non-trivial if ${\mathcal{S}}$ is normal on $B(a,r)$ and no infinite sequence $\{\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}_{n}\}\subset {\mathcal{S}}$ converges to a constant function. A rational function is post-critically finite (sometimes called critically finite), if each of its critical points has finite forward orbit, i.e. all critical points are preperiodic. According to Thurston [Reference ThurstonThu85, Reference Douady and HubbardDH93], there is an orbifold structure on $\mathbb{P}^{1}$ corresponding to each post-critically finite map. A rational function is post-critically finite with parabolic orbifold if and only if it is exceptional; or equivalently its Julia set is smooth (a circle, a line segment or the entire sphere) with smooth maximal entropy measure on it; see [Reference Douady and HubbardDH93].

3.4 The height functions

Let $K$ be a number field and $\overline{K}$ be the algebraic closure of $K$ . The number field $K$ is naturally equipped with a set $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}$ of pairwise inequivalent non-trivial absolute values, together with positive integers $N_{v}$ for each $v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}$ such that:

  • for each $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}\in K^{\ast }$ , we have $|\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}|_{v}=1$ for all but finitely many places $v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}$ ;

  • every $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}\in K^{\ast }$ satisfies the product formula

    (3.4.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\prod _{v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}}|\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}|_{v}^{N_{v}}=1.\end{eqnarray}$$

For each $v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}$ , let $K_{v}$ be the completion of $K$ at $v$ , let $\overline{K}_{v}$ be the algebraic closure of $K_{v}$ and let $\mathbb{C}_{v}$ denote the completion of $\overline{K}_{v}$ . We fix an embedding of $\overline{K}$ into $\mathbb{C}_{v}$ for each $v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}$ ; hence we have a fixed extension of $|\cdot |_{v}$ on $\overline{K}$ . If $v$ is Archimedean, then $\mathbb{C}_{v}\cong \mathbb{C}$ . Let $f\in K(z)$ be a rational function with degree $d\geqslant 2$ . There is a canonical height $\widehat{h}_{f}$ on $\mathbb{P}^{1}(\overline{K})$ given by

(3.4.2) $$\begin{eqnarray}\widehat{h}_{f}(x):=\frac{1}{[K(x):K]}\lim _{n\rightarrow \infty }\mathop{\sum }_{T\in \operatorname{Gal}(\overline{K}/K)\cdot X}~\mathop{\sum }_{v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}}N_{v}\cdot \frac{\log \Vert F^{n}(T)\Vert _{v}}{d^{n}},\end{eqnarray}$$

where $F:K^{2}\rightarrow K^{2}$ and $X$ are homogenous lifts of $f$ and respectively $x\in \mathbb{P}^{1}(\overline{K})$ , while $\Vert (z_{1},z_{2})\Vert _{v}:=\max \{|z_{1}|_{v},|z_{2}|_{v}\}$ . By product formula (3.4.1), the height $\widehat{h}_{f}$ does not depend on the choice of the homogenous lift $F$ and therefore it is well defined. As proven in [Reference Call and SilvermanCS93], $\widehat{h}_{f}(x)\geqslant 0$ with equality if and only if $x$ is preperiodic under the iteration of $f$ .

4 Adelic metrized line bundles and the equidistribution of points of small height

In this section, we set up the height functions and state the equidistribution theorem for points of small height, which would be used later in proving the main theorems of this article. The main tool we use here is the arithmetic equidistribution theorem for points with small height on algebraic varieties (see [Reference YuanYua08]).

4.1 Adelic metrized line bundle

Let ${\mathcal{L}}$ be an ample line bundle of an irreducible projective variety $V$ over a number field $K$ . As in § 3.4, $K$ is naturally equipped with absolute values $|\cdot |_{v}$ for $v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}$ . A metric $\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v}$ on ${\mathcal{L}}$ is a collection of norms, one for each $t\in V(K_{v})$ , on the fibres ${\mathcal{L}}(t)$ of the line bundle, with

$$\begin{eqnarray}\Vert \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}s(t)\Vert _{v}=|\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}|_{v}\Vert s(t)\Vert _{v}\end{eqnarray}$$

for any section $s$ of ${\mathcal{L}}$ . An adelic (semipositive) metrized line bundle $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}=\{{\mathcal{L}},\{\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v}\}_{v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}}\}$ over ${\mathcal{L}}$ is a collection of metrics on ${\mathcal{L}}$ , one for each place $v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}$ , satisfying certain continuity and coherence conditions; see [Reference ZhangZha95a, Reference ZhangZha95b, Reference Yuan and ZhangYZ17].

There are various adelic metrized line bundles; the simplest adelic (semipositive) metrized line bundle is the line bundle ${\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1)$ equipped with metrics $\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v}$ (for each $v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}$ ), which evaluated at a section $s:=u_{0}Z_{0}+u_{1}Z_{1}$ of ${\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1)$ (where $u_{0},u_{1}$ are scalars and $Z_{0},Z_{1}$ are the canonical sections of ${\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1)$ ) is given by

$$\begin{eqnarray}\Vert s([z_{0}:z_{1}])\Vert _{v}:=\frac{|u_{0}z_{0}+u_{1}z_{1}|_{v}}{\max \{|z_{0}|_{v},|z_{1}|_{v}\}}.\end{eqnarray}$$

Furthermore, we can define other metrics on ${\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1)$ corresponding to a rational function $f$ of degree $d\geqslant 2$ defined over $K$ . We fix a homogenous lift $F:K^{2}\rightarrow K^{2}$ of $f$ with homogenous degree $d$ . For $j\geqslant 1$ , write $F^{j}=(F_{0,j},F_{1,j})$ . For each place $v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}$ , we can define a metric on ${\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1)$ as

(4.1.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\Vert s([z_{0}:z_{1}])\Vert _{v,F,j}:=\frac{|u_{0}z_{0}+u_{1}z_{1}|_{v}}{\max \{|F_{0,j}(z_{0},z_{1})|_{v},|F_{1,j}(z_{0},z_{1})|_{v}\}^{1/d^{j}}},\end{eqnarray}$$

where $s=u_{0}Z_{0}+u_{1}Z_{1}$ with $u_{0},u_{1}$ scalars and $Z_{0},Z_{1}$ canonical sections of ${\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1)$ . Hence $\{{\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1),\{\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v,F,j}\}_{v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}}\}$ is an adelic metrized line bundle over ${\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1)$ .

A sequence $\{{\mathcal{L}},\{\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v,j}\}_{v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}}\}_{j\geqslant 1}$ of adelic metrized line bundles over an ample line bundle ${\mathcal{L}}$ on a variety $V$ is convergent to $\{{\mathcal{L}},\{\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v}\}_{v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}}\}$ , if for all $j$ and all but finitely many $v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}$ , we have that $\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v,j}=\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v}$ , and moreover, $\{\log (\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v,j}/\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v})\}_{j\geqslant 1}$ converges to $0$ uniformly on $V(\mathbb{C}_{v})$ for all $v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}$ . The limit $\{{\mathcal{L}},\{\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v}\}_{v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}}\}$ is an adelic metrized line bundle. Also, the tensor product of two (adelic) metrized line bundles is again a (adelic) metrized line bundle.

A typical example of a convergent sequence of adelic metrized line bundles is $\{\{{\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1),\{\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v,F,j}\}_{v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}}\}\}_{j\geqslant 1}$ which converges to the metrized line bundle denoted by

(4.1.2) $$\begin{eqnarray}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{F}:=\{{\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1),\{\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v,F}\}_{v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}}\}\end{eqnarray}$$

(see [Reference Baker and RumelyBR06] and also see [Reference ZhangZha95b, Theorem 2.2] for the more general case of a polarizable endomorphism $f$ of a projective variety).

As usual, we let $\tilde{f}=(f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n})$ with $f_{i}$ being a rational function of degree $d_{i}\geqslant 2$ defined over the number field $K$ for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n$ . Fix a homogenous lift $F_{i}$ for each $f_{i}$ and denote

$$\begin{eqnarray}\tilde{F}:=(F_{1},\ldots ,F_{n}).\end{eqnarray}$$

We let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{i}$ be the $i$ th coordination projection map from $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ to $\mathbb{P}^{1}$ . We construct an adelic metrized line bundle on $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ as follows

(4.1.3) $$\begin{eqnarray}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\tilde{F}}:=\{{\mathcal{L}}_{\tilde{F}},\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v,\tilde{F}}\}:=(\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{1}^{\ast }\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{F_{1}})\otimes (\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{2}^{\ast }\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{F_{2}})\otimes \cdots \otimes (\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{n}^{\ast }\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{F_{n}}),\end{eqnarray}$$

where the metric $\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v,\tilde{F}}$ on ${\mathcal{L}}_{\tilde{F}}$ is the one inherited from the metrics $\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v,F_{i}}$ on ${\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1)$ for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n$ .

4.2 Equidistribution of small points

For a semipositive metrized line bundle $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}$ on a (irreducible and projective) variety $V$ defined over a number field $K$ , the height for $t\in V(\overline{K})$ is given by

(4.2.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}}(t)=\frac{1}{|\text{Gal}(\overline{K}/K)\cdot t|}\mathop{\sum }_{y\in \operatorname{Gal}(\overline{K}/K)\cdot t}~\mathop{\sum }_{v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}}-N_{v}\cdot \log \Vert s(y)\Vert _{v},\end{eqnarray}$$

where $|\text{Gal}(\overline{K}/K)\cdot t|$ is the number of points in the Galois orbits of $t$ , and $s$ is any meromorphic section of ${\mathcal{L}}$ with support disjoint from $\operatorname{Gal}(\overline{K}/K)\cdot t$ . A sequence of points $t_{j}\in V(\overline{K})$ is small if $\lim _{j\rightarrow \infty }\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}}(t_{j})=\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}}(V)$ , and is generic if no subsequence of $t_{j}$ is contained in a proper Zariski closed subset of $V$ ; see [Reference ZhangZha95b] for more details on constructing the height for any irreducible subvariety $Y$ of $V$ (which is denoted by $\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}}(Y)$ ). We use the following equidistribution result due to Yuan [Reference YuanYua08] in the case of an arbitrary projective variety.

Theorem 4.1 [Reference YuanYua08, Theorem 3.1].

Let $V$ be a projective irreducible variety of dimension $n$ defined over a number field $K$ , and let $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}$ be a metrized line bundle over $V$ such that ${\mathcal{L}}$ is ample and the metric is semipositive. Let $\{t_{n}\}$ be a generic sequence of points in $V(\overline{K})$ which is small. Then for any $v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}$ , the Galois orbits of the sequence $\{t_{j}\}$ are equidistributed in the analytic space $V_{\mathbb{C}_{v}}^{an}$ with respect to the probability measure $d\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{v}=c_{1}(\overline{{\mathcal{L}}})_{v}^{n}/\text{deg}_{{\mathcal{L}}}(V)$ .

When $v$ is Archimedean, $V_{\mathbb{C}_{v}}^{an}$ corresponds to $V(\mathbb{C})$ and the curvature $c_{1}(\overline{{\mathcal{L}}})_{v}$ of the metric $\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v}$ is given by $c_{1}(\overline{{\mathcal{L}}})_{v}=(\unicode[STIX]{x2202}\overline{\unicode[STIX]{x2202}}/\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}i)\log \Vert \cdot \Vert _{v}$ . If $v$ is a non-Archimedean place, then $V_{\mathbb{C}_{v}}^{an}$ is the Berkovich space associated with $V(\mathbb{C}_{v})$ , and Chambert-Loir [Reference Chambert-LoirCha06] constructed an analog for the curvature on $V_{\mathbb{C}_{v}}^{an}$ . The precise meaning of the equidistribution statement in Theorem 4.1 is that

(4.2.2) $$\begin{eqnarray}\lim _{j\rightarrow \infty }\frac{1}{|\operatorname{Gal}(\overline{K}/K)\cdot t_{j}|}\mathop{\sum }_{y\in \operatorname{Gal}(\overline{K}/K)\cdot t_{j}}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FF}_{y}=\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{v},\end{eqnarray}$$

where $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FF}_{y}$ is the point mass probability measure supported on $y\in V_{\mathbb{C}_{v}}^{an}$ , while the limit from (4.2.2) is the weak limit for the corresponding probability measures on the compact space $V_{\mathbb{C}_{v}}^{an}$ .

4.3 Some examples

For the dynamical system $(\mathbb{P}^{1},f)$ corresponding to a rational function $f$ defined over a number field $K$ and of degree $d_{f}\geqslant 2$ , at an Archimedean place $v$ , it is well known that the curvature of the limit of the metrized line bundles

$$\begin{eqnarray}\{{\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1),\{\Vert \cdot \Vert _{v,F,j}\}_{v\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{K}}\}_{j\geqslant 1}\end{eqnarray}$$

is a $(1,1)$ -current given by $d\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f}$ , which is independent on the choice of $F$ . Combining the definition (3.4.2) of the canonical height $\widehat{h}_{f}$ of $f$ , with the height (4.2.1) of points for an adelic metrized line bundle and the definition (4.1.1) and (4.1.2) of $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{F}$ , we get

$$\begin{eqnarray}\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{F}}(x)=\widehat{h}_{f}(x)\end{eqnarray}$$

which is independent of the choice for the lift $F$ of $f$ .

We conclude this section by noting that in the case of the metrized line bundle $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\tilde{F}}$ on $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ associated with an endomorphism $\tilde{f}$ of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ (see § 4.1), at an Archimedean place $v$ , the $(n,n)$ -current satisfies the formula:

(4.3.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}c_{1}(\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\tilde{F}})_{v}^{n}=n!\cdot d\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}},\end{eqnarray}$$

where $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}=\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{1}}\times \cdots \times \unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{n}}$ is the invariant measure on $(\mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}_{v}}^{1})^{n}$ associated with the endomorphism $\tilde{f}=(f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n})$ . To see this, we first notice that since $v$ is Archimedean, then $\mathbb{C}_{v}=\mathbb{C}$ and so, by taking $(\unicode[STIX]{x2202}\overline{\unicode[STIX]{x2202}}/\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}i)\log \Vert \cdot \Vert _{v,\tilde{F}}$ we get

(4.3.2) $$\begin{eqnarray}c_{1}(\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\tilde{F}})_{v}=dd^{c}(u_{1}(x_{1})+\cdots +u_{n}(x_{n})),\end{eqnarray}$$

where $u_{i}(x_{i})$ is a locally defined continuous subharmonic function on $\mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}_{v}}^{1}$ with $dd^{c}u_{i}=d\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{i}}$ for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n$ . Hence

$$\begin{eqnarray}c_{1}(\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\tilde{F}})_{v}^{n}=n!\cdot dd^{c}u_{1}(x_{1})\wedge \cdots \wedge dd^{c}u_{n}(x_{n})=n!\cdot d\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}},\end{eqnarray}$$

and so, the equality from (4.3.1) follows. Moreover, for a point $t=(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n})\in (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}(\overline{K})$ , from (4.1.3) we see that

(4.3.3) $$\begin{eqnarray}\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\tilde{F}}}(t)=\widehat{h}_{f_{1}}(a_{1})+\cdots +\widehat{h}_{f_{n}}(a_{n}).\end{eqnarray}$$

5 Measures and heights on a hypersurface

In this section we study the measures and the corresponding heights on a hypersurface in $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ ; this allows us to obtain two important technical ingredients (Theorem 5.1 and Proposition 5.2) which will later be used in proving Theorem 2.2. So, let $\hat{f}=(f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n})$ be an endomorphism of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ defined over a number field $K$ , with degrees $d_{i}\geqslant 2$ for each rational function $f_{i}$ (for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n$ ). Also, let $H\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ be an irreducible hypersurface defined over $K$ , which projects dominantly onto each subset of $(n-1)$ coordinate axes.

5.1 Adelic metrized line bundles on the hypersurface

For each $i=1,\ldots ,n$ , as in (3.2.1), we let $\tilde{f}_{i}$ be the endomorphism of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ given by forgetting the $i$ th coordinate axis (along with the action of $f_{i}$ ) in the dynamical system $((\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n},\hat{f})$ . Let $\tilde{F}_{i}$ be a homogenous lift of $\tilde{f}_{i}$ as in § 3.2 and then similar to (4.1.3), we construct an adelic metrized line bundle $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\tilde{F}_{i}}$ on $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ such that when $v$ is Archimedean, we have

$$\begin{eqnarray}c_{1}(\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\tilde{F}_{i}})_{v}^{n-1}=(n-1)!\cdot d\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}\end{eqnarray}$$

(for each $1\leqslant i\leqslant n$ ), where the probability measure $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}$ on $(\mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}_{v}}^{1})^{n-1}$ is the one appearing in (3.2.2).

For each $i=1,\ldots ,n$ , we recall from § 3.2 that the projection

$$\begin{eqnarray}\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}:H\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}\end{eqnarray}$$

is the one given by forgetting the $i$ th coordinates; $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}$ is a finite, dominant morphism (due to our assumption on $H$ ). We let

(5.1.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}}:=\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}^{\ast }\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\tilde{F}_{i}}\end{eqnarray}$$

be an adelic metrized line bundle on $H$ , which is the pullback of the adelic metrized line bundle $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\tilde{F}_{i}}$ (on $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ ) by the morphism $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}}_{i}$ .

5.2 Height functions on the hypersurface

For each $i=1,\ldots ,n$ and each $t=(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n})\in H(\overline{K})$ , using (4.3.3) we conclude that

(5.2.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}}}(t)=\widehat{h}_{f_{1}}(a_{1})+\cdots +\widehat{h}_{f_{i-1}}(a_{i-1})+\widehat{h}_{f_{i+1}}(a_{i+1})+\cdots +\widehat{h}_{f_{n}}(a_{n}).\end{eqnarray}$$

Hence $\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}}}(t)\geqslant 0$ with equality if and only if $a_{j}$ is preperiodic under $f_{j}$ for each $j\neq i$ with $1\leqslant j\leqslant n$ . So, if the set of all $t\in H(\overline{K})$ for which $\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}}}(t)=0$ is Zariski-dense on $H$ , then each essential minima $e_{j}(\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}})$ (for $j=1,\ldots ,n$ , defined as in [Reference ZhangZha95b]) are equal to $0$ . Therefore, using the inequality from [Reference ZhangZha95b, Theorem 1.10], we conclude that

(5.2.2) $$\begin{eqnarray}\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}}}(H)=0.\end{eqnarray}$$

5.3 Equal measures on the hypersurface

Now we are ready to prove the following result.

Theorem 5.1. Suppose that there is a generic sequence of points $t_{j}=(x_{1,j},\ldots ,x_{n,j})\in H(\overline{K})$ such that

$$\begin{eqnarray}\lim _{j\rightarrow \infty }\widehat{h}_{f_{1}}(x_{1,j})+\cdots +\widehat{h}_{f_{n}}(x_{n,j})=0.\end{eqnarray}$$

Then $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{1}=\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{2}=\cdots =\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n}$ .

Proof. This is an immediate consequence of Theorem 4.1 applied to the sequence of points $t_{j}=(x_{1,j},\ldots ,x_{n,j})\in H(\overline{K})$ with respect to the adelic metrized line bundles $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}}$ for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n$ . Indeed, when $v$ is Archimedean, using (5.2.2) and the assumption on the points $t_{j}\in H$ we get that the Galois orbits of $t_{j}$ in $H$ equidistribute with respect to the probability measures $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}$ on $H(\mathbb{C})$ for each $i\in \{1,\ldots ,n\}$ . Hence $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{1}=\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{2}=\cdots =\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n}$ .◻

5.4 Preperiodic points on hypersurfaces

In this section we prove the following important result; we thank Xinyi Yuan and Shouwu Zhang for several very helpful conversations regarding its proof.

Proposition 5.2. Let $n\geqslant 2$ be an integer, let $f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n}\in \mathbb{C}(x)$ be rational functions of degrees $d_{i}\geqslant 2$ and let $H\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ be an irreducible hypersurface which projects dominantly onto any subset of $(n-1)$ coordinate axes. Assume:

  1. (1) either that $H$ contains a Zariski dense set of preperiodic points under the action of $(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})\mapsto (f_{1}(x_{1}),\ldots ,f_{n}(x_{n}))$ and that $d_{1}=\cdots =d_{n}$ ;

  2. (2) or that $f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n}\in \bar{\mathbb{Q}}(x)$ , that $H$ is defined over $\bar{\mathbb{Q}}$ , and that there exists a Zariski dense sequence of points $(x_{1,j},\ldots ,x_{n,j})\in H(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ such that $\lim _{j\rightarrow \infty }\sum _{i=1}^{n}\widehat{h}_{f_{i}}(x_{i,j})=0$ , where $\widehat{h}_{f_{i}}$ is the canonical height with respect to the rational function $f_{i}$ .

Then there exists $i\in \{1,\ldots ,n\}$ such that for any $(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n})\in H(\mathbb{C})$ with $a_{j}$ being preperiodic under the action of $f_{j}$ for each $j\in \{1,\ldots ,n\}\setminus \{i\}$ , we must have that also $a_{i}$ is preperiodic under the action of $f_{i}$ .

We prove first that hypothesis (2) in Proposition 5.2 yields the desired conclusion, and then we prove that part (1) may be reduced to part (2) in Proposition 5.2 through a specialization result of Yuan and Zhang [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZa, Reference Yuan and ZhangYZb].

Proof of Proposition 5.2 assuming hypothesis (2) holds.

Since the case $n=2$ was proven in [Reference MimarMim97] (see also [Reference MimarMim13]), from now on, we assume $n>2$ . We assume each $f_{i}\in \bar{\mathbb{Q}}(x)$ and also that $H$ is defined over $\bar{\mathbb{Q}}$ .

We use the notation as in § 5.1; so, we consider the adelic metrics $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}}$ (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ) on $H$ , defined as in (5.1.1). For the sake of simplifying our notation, we will denote from now on the tensor product of two line bundles ${\mathcal{M}}_{1}$ and ${\mathcal{M}}_{2}$ as ${\mathcal{M}}_{1}+{\mathcal{M}}_{2}$ . We denote by $\overline{\text{Pic}}(H)$ the group of (adelic) metrized line bundles on $H$ .

Lemma 5.3. There exist real numbers $c_{i}$ (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ) not all equal to $0$ such that the metrized line bundle

(5.4.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}:=c_{1}\cdot \overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{1}}+\cdots +c_{n}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{n}}\in \overline{\text{Pic}}(H)\otimes \mathbb{R}\end{eqnarray}$$

has the property that $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}\cdot x=\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}}(x)=0$ for each $x\in H(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ .

Proof of Lemma 5.3.

We thank Shouwu Zhang for suggesting to us the proof of this lemma, which follows the idea used in the proof of [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZ17, Theorem 4.13].

We let $\hat{{\mathcal{L}}}_{i}\in \text{Pic}(H)$ be the line bundle supporting $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}}$ , i.e.,

$$\begin{eqnarray}\hat{{\mathcal{L}}}_{i}:=\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{1}^{\ast }{\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1)\otimes \cdots \otimes \unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{i-1}^{\ast }{\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1)\otimes \unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{i+1}^{\ast }{\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1)\otimes \cdots \otimes \unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{n}^{\ast }{\mathcal{O}}_{\mathbb{P}^{1}}(1),\end{eqnarray}$$

where $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{j}$ is the induced projection map of $H$ onto the $j$ th coordinate axis of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ (for each $j=1,\ldots ,n$ ).

Claim 5.4. There exist real constants $c_{1},\ldots ,c_{n}$ (not all equal to $0$ ) such that the line bundle ${\mathcal{L}}_{0}:=\sum _{i=1}^{n}c_{i}\hat{{\mathcal{L}}}_{i}\in \text{Pic}(H)\otimes \mathbb{R}$ is numerically trivial.

Proof of Claim 5.4.

The main ingredient in our proof is a result on arithmetic intersections, which generalizes the classical Hodge index theorem (see [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZ17, Theorem 5.20]). We let

(5.4.2) $$\begin{eqnarray}{\mathcal{L}}_{1}:=\mathop{\sum }_{i=1}^{n}\hat{{\mathcal{L}}}_{i}\in \text{Pic}(H);\end{eqnarray}$$

then ${\mathcal{L}}_{1}$ is ample (since it is the pullback of an ample line bundle on $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ under the natural inclusion map $H{\hookrightarrow}(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ ). We find the real numbers $c_{i}$ so that ${\mathcal{L}}_{0}:=\sum _{i=1}^{n}c_{i}\hat{{\mathcal{L}}}_{i}$ satisfies the following two conditions:

  1. (A) ${\mathcal{L}}_{0}\cdot {\mathcal{L}}_{1}^{n-2}=0$ ;

  2. (B) ${\mathcal{L}}_{0}^{2}\cdot {\mathcal{L}}_{1}^{n-3}=0$ .

Condition (A) above yields a linear relation between the unknowns $c_{i}$ . On the other hand, condition (B) yields a quadratic form in the variables $c_{i}$ . This quadratic form is not positive-definite since (from the generalization of the Hodge index theorem proven in [Reference FaltingsFal84, Reference HriljacHri85, Reference MoriwakiMor96]) we know that generically, for any line bundle ${\mathcal{M}}$ satisfying ${\mathcal{M}}\cdot {\mathcal{L}}_{1}^{n-2}=0$ , we have that ${\mathcal{M}}^{2}\cdot {\mathcal{L}}_{1}^{n-3}\leqslant 0$ . Also, this quadratic form is not negative definite since ${\mathcal{L}}_{1}^{2}\cdot {\mathcal{L}}_{1}^{n-3}={\mathcal{L}}_{1}^{n-1}>0$ (because ${\mathcal{L}}_{1}$ is ample). Therefore, there exist real numbers $c_{i}$ , not all equal to $0$ such that ${\mathcal{L}}_{0}$ satisfies both conditions (A) and (B) above. Then [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZ17, Theorem 5.20] yields that ${\mathcal{L}}_{0}$ is numerically trivial, as claimed.◻

Now let $c_{1},\ldots ,c_{n}\in \mathbb{R}$ satisfy the conclusion of Claim 5.4 and define

$$\begin{eqnarray}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}:=\mathop{\sum }_{i=1}^{n}c_{i}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}}\in \overline{\text{Pic}}(H)\otimes \mathbb{R}.\end{eqnarray}$$

We consider next the adelic metrized line bundle $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}:=\sum _{i=1}^{n}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}}$ ; note that the generic fibre of $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}$ is the ample line bundle ${\mathcal{L}}_{1}$ from (5.4.2). Using our hypothesis (2) from Proposition 5.2, i.e., the existence of a Zariski dense set of points on $H$ of height tending to $0$ , we obtain that each of the successive minima $e_{j}(\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1})=0$ for $j=0,\ldots ,n-1$ . Note that for each $j=0,\ldots ,n$ , we have

$$\begin{eqnarray}e_{j}(\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}):=\sup _{\substack{ Y\subset H \\ \text{codim}_{H}(Y)=j}}\inf _{x\in (H\setminus Y)(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})}\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}}(x)\end{eqnarray}$$

and so, indeed hypothesis (2) of Proposition 5.2 yields that $e_{j}(\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1})=0$ . In particular, $e_{n}(\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1})=0$ and thus $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}^{n}=0$ . The exact same argument applied for each $i_{1},i_{2}=1,\ldots ,n$ and for each $m_{1},m_{2}\in \mathbb{N}$ to the metrized line bundle $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{i_{1},i_{2},m_{1},m_{2}}:=\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}+m_{1}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i_{1}}}+m_{2}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i_{2}}}$ yields again

(5.4.3) $$\begin{eqnarray}(\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}+m_{1}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i_{1}}}+m_{2}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i_{2}}})^{n}=0.\end{eqnarray}$$

Keeping $i_{1}$ and $i_{2}$ fixed and letting $m_{1}$ and $m_{2}$ vary in $\mathbb{N}$ , we see that (5.4.3) yields that $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}^{j_{0}}\cdot \overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i_{1}}}^{j_{1}}\cdot \overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i_{2}}}^{j_{2}}=0$ for non-negative integers $j_{0},j_{1},j_{2}$ such that $j_{0}+j_{1}+j_{2}=n$ . Hence

(5.4.4) $$\begin{eqnarray}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}^{2}\cdot \overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}^{n-2}=0;\end{eqnarray}$$

moreover, because the numbers $c_{i}$ satisfy the construction from Claim 5.4 (see condition (A) in the proof of the aforementioned Claim), we also have that

(5.4.5) $$\begin{eqnarray}{\mathcal{L}}_{0}\cdot {\mathcal{L}}_{1}^{n-2}=0.\end{eqnarray}$$

Furthermore, since each $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}}$ is semipositive, we obtain that (with the terminology from [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZ17]) $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}$ is $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}$ -bounded, i.e., there exists $m\in \mathbb{N}$ (any integer larger than $\max _{i}|c_{i}|$ would work) such that both $m\cdot \overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}-\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}$ and $m\cdot \overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}+\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}$ are semipositive.

Since $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}$ may not necessarily be arithmetically positive, we alter $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}$ by adding to it an arbitrarily positive metrized line bundle $\unicode[STIX]{x1D704}^{\ast }({\mathcal{C}})$ where ${\mathcal{C}}$ is a positive metrized line bundle on $\text{Spec}(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D704}:H\longrightarrow \text{Spec}(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ is the structure morphism (for a similar application, see the proof of [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZ17, Theorem 4.13]). Then $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}$ would still be $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}^{\prime }$ -bounded with respect to this new metrized line bundle $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}^{\prime }:=\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}+\unicode[STIX]{x1D704}^{\ast }({\mathcal{C}})$ . Because the generic fibre of $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}$ is numerically trivial (according to our choice of the numbers $c_{i}$ satisfying the conclusion of Claim 5.4), then (5.4.4) and (5.4.5) yield

(5.4.6) $$\begin{eqnarray}{\mathcal{L}}_{0}\cdot ({\mathcal{L}}_{1}^{\prime })^{n-1}=0\quad \text{and}\quad \overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}^{2}\cdot (\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{1}^{\prime })^{n-2}=0.\end{eqnarray}$$

Thus the hypotheses of [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZ17, Theorem 3.2] are verified and so, we obtain that the metrized line bundle $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}$ is itself numerically trivial, i.e., $\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}}(x)=0$ for each $x\in H(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ . This concludes the proof of Lemma 5.3.◻

So, by Lemma 5.3, there exist suitable constants $c_{i}\in \mathbb{R}$ (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ), not all equal to $0$ such that the metrized line bundle $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}:=c_{1}\cdot \overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{1}}+\cdots +c_{n}\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{n}}\in \overline{\text{Pic}}(H)\otimes \mathbb{R}$ is numerically trivial on $H$ and therefore, for each $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}\in H(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ , we have that $\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{0}\cdot \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}=0$ , i.e.,

(5.4.7) $$\begin{eqnarray}\mathop{\sum }_{i=1}^{n}c_{i}\cdot \widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}}}(\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC})=0.\end{eqnarray}$$

Since not all $c_{i}$ are equal to $0$ , then there exists some $i_{0}\in \{1,\ldots ,n\}$ with the property that

(5.4.8) $$\begin{eqnarray}c_{1}+\cdots +c_{i_{0}-1}+c_{i_{0}+1}+\cdots +c_{n}\neq 0.\end{eqnarray}$$

Now, for any $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}:=(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n})\in H(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ and for any $i=1,\ldots ,n$ , we have that

(5.4.9) $$\begin{eqnarray}\widehat{h}_{\overline{{\mathcal{L}}}_{\hat{F}_{i}}}(\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC})=\widehat{h}_{f_{1}}(a_{1})+\cdots +\widehat{h}_{f_{i-1}}(a_{i-1})+\widehat{h}_{f_{i+1}}(a_{i+1})+\cdots +\widehat{h}_{f_{n}}(a_{n}),\end{eqnarray}$$

as shown in (5.2.1). Now, if

$$\begin{eqnarray}\widehat{h}_{f_{1}}(a_{1})=\cdots =\widehat{h}_{f_{i_{0}-1}}(a_{i_{0}-1})=\widehat{h}_{f_{i_{0}+1}}(a_{i_{0}+1})=\cdots =\widehat{h}_{f_{n}}(a_{n})=0,\end{eqnarray}$$

then (5.4.7), (5.4.8) and (5.4.9) yield that also $\widehat{h}_{f_{i_{0}}}(a_{i_{0}})=0$ , as claimed in the conclusion of Proposition 5.2. This concludes our proof of Proposition 5.2 assuming each rational function $f_{i}$ along with the hypersurface $H$ are defined over $\bar{\mathbb{Q}}$ .◻

Proof of Proposition 5.2 assuming hypothesis (1) holds.

We let $K\subset \mathbb{C}$ be a finitely generated extension of $\bar{\mathbb{Q}}$ such that each $f_{i}\in K(x)$ and also $H$ is defined over $K$ . We argue by induction on $r:=\text{trdeg}_{\bar{\mathbb{Q}}}K$ ; the case $r=0$ is already proved using Proposition 5.2 with hypothesis (2). Hence, we assume the conclusion of Proposition 5.2 holds whenever $r<s$ (for some $s\in \mathbb{N}$ ) and we prove that it also holds when $r=s$ . We know there exists an infinite sequence $S$ of points $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}_{j}\in H(\mathbb{C})$ such that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}_{j}$ has its $i$ th coordinate preperiodic under the action of $f_{i}$ (for each $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ). Also, we let

$$\begin{eqnarray}d:=\deg (f_{1})=\deg (f_{2})=\cdots =\deg (f_{n}).\end{eqnarray}$$

Then we let $K_{0}$ be a subfield $\bar{\mathbb{Q}}\subset K_{0}\subset K$ such that $\text{trdeg}_{K_{0}}K=1$ and we let ${\mathcal{C}}$ be a curve defined over $K_{0}$ whose function field is $K$ (at the expense of replacing both $K_{0}$ and $K$ by finite extensions, we may assume ${\mathcal{C}}$ is a projective, smooth, geometrically irreducible curve). We fix some algebraic closures $\overline{K_{0}}\subset \overline{K}$ of our fields.

There exists a Zariski dense, open subset $C\subseteq {\mathcal{C}}$ such that we may view each $f_{i}$ as a base change of an endomorphism $f_{i,C}$ of $\mathbb{P}_{C}^{1}$ ; similarly, $H$ is the base change of a hypersurface $H_{C}\subset (\mathbb{P}_{C}^{1})^{n}$ , while $S$ is the base change of a subset $S_{C}\subset H_{C}$ . For each geometric point $t\in C(\overline{K_{0}})$ , the objects $H_{C}$ , $f_{i,C}$ and $S_{C}$ have reductions $H_{t}$ , $f_{i,t}$ and respectively $S_{t}$ , such that $S_{t}\subset H_{C}$ consists of points with their $i$ th coordinate preperiodic under the action of $f_{i,C}$ , for each $i=1,\ldots ,n$ .

Claim 5.5. There exists a Zariski dense, open subset $C_{0}\subseteq C\subseteq {\mathcal{C}}$ such that for each $t\in C_{0}(\overline{K_{0}})$ , the set $S_{t}$ is Zariski dense in $H_{t}$ .

Proof of Claim 5.5.

We let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}:=(f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n-1})$ be the coordinatewise action of these rational functions on the first $n-1$ coordinates of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ ; since $d_{1}=\cdots =d_{n-1}=d>1$ , we know that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}$ is a polarizable endomorphism of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ . We let $\tilde{S}$ be the projection of the set $S$ on the first $n-1$ coordinate axes of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ ; because $S\subset H$ is dense and $H$ projects dominantly onto the first  $n-1$  coordinate axes, we conclude that $\tilde{S}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ is also dense. Note that each point of $\tilde{S}$ is a preperiodic point for $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}$ . As before, we let $\tilde{S}_{t}$ be the specialization of the set $\tilde{S}_{C}$ at some point $t\in C_{0}(\overline{K_{0}})$ .

As proven in [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZb, Theorem 4.7] (see also [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZa, Lemma 3.2.3]), the set $\tilde{S}_{t}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ is still Zariski dense for all the $\overline{K_{0}}$ -points $t$ of a dense open subset $C_{0}\subseteq C$ . Here it is the only point in our argument where we use that $d_{1}=\cdots =d_{n}$ because Yuan and Zhang [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZb, Reference Yuan and ZhangYZa] show that specializing a Zariski dense set of preperiodic points for a polarizable endomorphism yields also a Zariski dense set of preperiodic points for all specializations in a dense, open subset of the base; in their proof, they employ a result of Faber [Reference FaberFab09] and of Gubler [Reference GublerGub08] regarding the equidistribution of subvarieties of a given polarizable dynamical system $(X,\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7})$ with respect to the invariant measure of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ . (As an aside, we note that the results of [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZa] were recently published in [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZ17], while [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZb] has been updated to [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZ13] using slightly different arguments.) Finally, since $\tilde{S}_{t}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ is Zariski dense, then the Zariski closure of $S_{t}$ must have dimension $n-1$ because $S_{t}$ projects to $\tilde{S}_{t}$ on the first $n-1$ coordinate axes of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ . Hence $S_{t}\subset H_{t}$ is Zariski dense, which concludes the proof of Claim 5.5.◻

Let $C_{0}$ be the Zariski dense, open subset of $C$ satisfying the conclusion of Claim 5.5. At the expense of perhaps shrinking $C_{0}$ to a smaller, dense, open subset, we may assume that

(5.4.10) $$\begin{eqnarray}\deg (f_{i,t})=d>1\quad \text{for all }i=1,\ldots ,n\text{ and each }t\in C_{0}(\overline{K_{0}}).\end{eqnarray}$$

For each $t\in C_{0}(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ , our inductive hypothesis (which can be applied since each $f_{i}$ and also $H$ are defined over $\overline{K_{0}}$ and $\text{trdeg}_{\bar{\mathbb{Q}}}\overline{K_{0}}<s$ ) yields the existence of some index $i_{t}\in \{1,\ldots ,n\}$ which has the property that for each $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}\in H_{t}(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ , if we know that the $j$ th coordinate of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}$ is preperiodic under the action of $f_{j,t}$ for each $j\in \{1,\ldots ,n\}\setminus \{i_{t}\}$ , then also the $i_{t}$ th coordinate of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}$ is preperiodic under the action of $f_{i_{t},t}$ .

Let $h_{{\mathcal{C}}}(\cdot )$ be a height function for the points on ${\mathcal{C}}(\overline{K_{0}})$ corresponding to a divisor of degree $1$ on ${\mathcal{C}}$ , constructed with respect to the Weil height on $\overline{K_{0}}$ . Note that if $\text{trdeg}_{\mathbb{Q}}K_{0}\geqslant 1$ , then we construct the Weil height on the function field $K_{0}/\bar{\mathbb{Q}}$ as in [Reference Bombieri and GublerBG06]. At the expense of replacing $C_{0}$ by an infinite subset $U_{0}$ for which

(5.4.11) $$\begin{eqnarray}\sup _{t\in U_{0}}h_{{\mathcal{C}}}(t)=+\infty ,\end{eqnarray}$$

we may even assume that for each $t\in U_{0}$ , there is the same index $i_{0}:=i_{t}\in \{1,\ldots ,n\}$ satisfying the above property. We show next that this index $i_{0}$ would satisfy the conclusion of Proposition 5.2 for $H$ .

Indeed, let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}=(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n})\in H(\overline{K})$ with the property that for each $j\in \{1,\ldots ,n\}\setminus \{i_{0}\}$ , we have that $a_{j}$ is preperiodic under the action of $f_{j}$ . Then for each $t\in U_{0}$ we have that each $a_{j,t}$ (for $j\in \{1,\ldots ,n\}\setminus \{i_{0}\}$ ) is preperiodic for $f_{j,t}$ and so, also $a_{i_{0},t}$ is preperiodic under the action of $f_{i_{0},t}$ . Therefore, the canonical height

(5.4.12) $$\begin{eqnarray}\widehat{h}_{f_{i_{0},t}}(a_{i_{0},t})=0,\end{eqnarray}$$

where $\widehat{h}_{f_{i_{0},t}}(\cdot )$ is the canonical height corresponding to the rational function $f_{i_{0},t}$ (which has degree larger than $1$ ; see (5.4.10)), constructed using the Weil height on $\overline{K_{0}}$ . Using [Reference Call and SilvermanCS93, Theorem 4.1], we have that

(5.4.13) $$\begin{eqnarray}\lim _{h_{{\mathcal{C}}}(t)\rightarrow \infty }\frac{\widehat{h}_{f_{i_{0},t}}(a_{i_{0},t})}{h_{{\mathcal{C}}}(t)}=\widehat{h}_{f_{i_{0}}}(a_{i_{0}}),\end{eqnarray}$$

where $\widehat{h}_{f_{i_{0}}}(\cdot )$ is the canonical height of $f_{i_{0}}$ constructed with respect to the function field $K/K_{0}$ . Equations (5.4.11), (5.4.12) and (5.4.13) yield that

(5.4.14) $$\begin{eqnarray}\widehat{h}_{f_{i_{0}}}(a_{i_{0}})=0.\end{eqnarray}$$

If $f_{i_{0}}\in K(x)$ is not isotrivial over $K_{0}$ , then [Reference BakerBak09] (see also [Reference BenedettoBen05] for the case of polynomials) yields that (5.4.14) is equivalent with saying that $a_{i_{0}}$ is preperiodic under the action of $f_{i_{0}}$ , as desired. Now, if $f_{i_{0}}$ is isotrivial over $K_{0}$ , then there exists a linear transformation

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}:\mathbb{P}^{1}\longrightarrow \mathbb{P}^{1}\quad (\text{defined over }\overline{K})\end{eqnarray}$$

such that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}^{-1}\circ f_{i_{0}}\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D708}\in \overline{K_{0}}(x)$ . If $\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}^{-1}(a_{i_{0}})\in \overline{K_{0}}$ , then since we know there exists even a single specialization $t$ such that $a_{i_{0},t}$ is preperiodic for $f_{t}$ , we get that also $a_{i_{0}}$ is preperiodic for $f_{i_{0}}$ . On the other hand, if $\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}^{-1}(a_{i_{0}})\notin \overline{K_{0}}$ , then $\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}^{-1}(a_{i_{0}})$ cannot be preperiodic for $\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}^{-1}\circ f_{i_{0}}\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D708}\in \overline{K_{0}}(x)$ and so, $a_{i_{0}}$ is not preperiodic for $f_{i_{0}}$ , contradiction. This concludes the proof of Proposition 5.2 under hypothesis (1).◻

6 Hypersurfaces having a Zariski dense set of preperiodic points

In this section, we prove Theorem 6.1, which (essentially) says that there is no hypersurface $H$ containing a Zariski dense set of preperiodic points under the coordinatewise action of some rational functions $f_{i}$ , along with some additional technical conditions. To make things simple, we work on a hypersurface $H\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n+1}$ of dimension $n$ and use the following notation

$$\begin{eqnarray}\tilde{x}=(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n}),\quad \text{}\underline{x}=(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n-1})\end{eqnarray}$$

and hence $\tilde{a}=(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n}),\text{}\underline{a}=(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n-1})$ , etc. We denote by $D(a,r)\subset \mathbb{C}$ the usual disk of radius $r$ centred at $a$ ; also, we use the following notation for polydiscs:

$$\begin{eqnarray}D_{n-1}(\text{}\underline{a},r)=D(a_{1},r)\times \cdots \times D(a_{n-1},r)\quad \text{and}\quad D_{n}(\tilde{a},r)=D_{n-1}(\text{}\underline{a},r)\times D(a_{n},r).\end{eqnarray}$$

For the benefit of our readers, we split our proof of Theorem 6.1 into several subsections, each one presenting a different step in our argument.

6.1 Statement of our theorem

Theorem 6.1. Let $n\geqslant 2$ , let $f_{i}$ be rational functions defined over $\mathbb{C}$ of degrees $d_{i}>1$ (for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n+1$ ), and let $H\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n+1}$ be an irreducible hypersurface defined over $\mathbb{C}$ which projects dominantly onto each subset of $n$ coordinate axes. For each $i=1,\ldots ,n+1$ , let $\tilde{f}_{i}$ be the coordinatewise action on $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ given by

$$\begin{eqnarray}(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{i-1},x_{i+1},\ldots ,x_{n+1})\mapsto (f_{1}(x_{1}),\ldots ,f_{i-1}(x_{i-1}),f_{i+1}(x_{i+1}),\ldots ,f_{n+1}(x_{n+1})).\end{eqnarray}$$

Let $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}$ be the measures on $H$ induced from the dynamical systems $((\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n},\tilde{f}_{i})$ and assume that $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}=\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n+1}$ for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n$ . Also assume that there is a point $(\tilde{a},b_{0})\in H\,\cap \,\mathbb{C}^{n+1}$ with $\tilde{a}=(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n})$ , such that:

  • $a_{i}$ is a repelling fixed point of $f_{i}$ for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n$ ; and

  • $b_{1}:=f_{n+1}(b_{0})$ is a fixed point of $f_{n+1}$ ; and

  • there is a holomorphic germ $h(\tilde{x})$ at $\tilde{a}$ with $h(\tilde{a})=b_{0}$ , and $(\tilde{x},h(\tilde{x}))\in H(\mathbb{C})$ for all $\tilde{x}\in \mathbb{C}^{n}$ in a small (complex analytic) neighbourhood of $\tilde{a}$ . Moreover, for each $i=1,\ldots ,n$ we have that

    $$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}_{i}:=\frac{\unicode[STIX]{x2202}h}{\unicode[STIX]{x2202}x_{i}}(\tilde{a})\neq 0.\end{eqnarray}$$

Then the functions $f_{i}$ must be exceptional, and moreover, they are

  • either all of them conjugate to monomials and $\pm$ Chebyshev polynomials,

  • or all of them Lattès maps.

Proof. As we previously stated, we will prove Theorem 6.1 over the next several subsections of § 6. To summarize, in § 6.2 we construct a local symmetry $g$ of the Julia set $J_{f_{n+1}}$ as in (6.2.1) fixing $b_{0}$ and with multiplier $\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}$ of absolute value greater than one. This, coupled with a refined analysis of the dynamics of $f_{i}$ , allows us in §§ 6.3 and 6.4 to construct two normal families of local symmetries $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}_{\ell }$ (as in (6.4.1)) and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{\ell }$ (as in (6.4.2)) preserving the $(n,n)$ -current corresponding to $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{1}}\times \cdots \times \unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{n}}$ (up to a scaling). Using Proposition 6.4, we reduce the symmetries $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{\ell }$ of the $(n,n)$ -current to the symmetries $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{\ell }(\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}},x_{n})$ of $J_{f_{n}}$ for fixed $\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}}\in J_{f_{1}}\times \cdots \times J_{f_{n-1}}$ . Finally, combining this with the rigidity (proven by Levin [Reference LevinLev90]) of the symmetries of the Julia set, we finish the proof of Theorem 6.1 in § 6.7.

6.2 Julia sets and invariant measures

From the assumptions of Theorem 6.1, the multiplier

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}_{i}:=f_{i}^{\prime }(a_{i})\end{eqnarray}$$

has absolute value $|\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}_{i}|>1$ for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n$ . So, each $a_{i}$ is in the support of the Julia set $J_{f_{i}}$ of $f_{i}$ , for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ . Thus $(\tilde{a},b_{0})$ is in the support of $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n+1}$ and because $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n}=\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n+1}$ , we get that $(\tilde{a},b_{0})$ must be in the support of $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n}$ . Therefore, $b_{0}$ must be in the support $J_{f_{n+1}}$ of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{n+1}}$ . Hence $b_{1}=f_{n+1}(b_{0})\in J_{f_{n+1}}$ and so, it has multiplier

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D70C}:=f_{n+1}^{\prime }(b_{1})\end{eqnarray}$$

of absolute value $|\unicode[STIX]{x1D70C}|\geqslant 1$ . Let $j_{0}$ be the local degree of the map $f_{n+1}(x)$ at $x=b_{0}$ , and let $g(x)$ be a holomorphic germ on $\mathbb{P}^{1}$ at $b_{0}$ which is one of the following branches

(6.2.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}g(x):=f_{n+1}^{-1}\circ f_{n+1}\circ f_{n+1}(x)\end{eqnarray}$$

satisfying $g(b_{0})=b_{0}$ . Although there are $j_{0}$ different choices for $g(x)$ , in the rest of this section we fix our choice $g(x)$ for such a branch. An easy computation shows that

(6.2.2)

is a $j_{0}$ th root of the multiplier $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70C}$ of $f_{n+1}$ at $b_{1}$ . Since $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{n+1}}$ admits no atoms on $\mathbb{P}^{1}$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{n+1}}(f_{n+1}(A))=d_{n+1}\cdot \unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{n+1}}(A)$ for any Borel set $A$ with $f_{n+1}$ being injective on $A$ , the definition of $g(x)$ yields that

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{n+1}}(g(A))=d_{n+1}\cdot \unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{n+1}}(A)\end{eqnarray}$$

for any Borel set $A$ in a small neighbourhood of $b_{0}$ .

Lemma 6.2. The multiplier $\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}$ of $g(x)$ at $b_{0}$ has absolute value $|\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}|>1$ .

Proof of Lemma 6.2.

We first assume that $|\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}|\leqslant 1$ and then prove the lemma by deriving a contradiction. Using (6.2.2) and the fact that $|\unicode[STIX]{x1D70C}|\geqslant 1$ , we get that $|\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}|=1$ .

Pick a positive integer $m$ with $d_{n}<d_{n+1}^{m}$ . Let

(6.2.3) $$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{00}(\tilde{x}):=(\text{}\underline{x},h(\text{}\underline{x},f_{n}(x_{n})))\quad \text{and}\quad \unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{11}(\tilde{x}):=(\text{}\underline{x},g^{m}\circ h(\tilde{x}))\end{eqnarray}$$

be functions locally defined in a neighbourhood of $\tilde{a}\in \mathbb{C}^{n}$ , mapping that small neighbourhood of $\tilde{a}$ into a neighbourhood of $(\text{}\underline{a},b_{0})\in \mathbb{C}^{n}$ . Since $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n}=\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n+1}$ , there exists some $c>0$ with

(6.2.4) $$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{00}^{\ast }(\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n})=c\cdot d_{n}\cdot \tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n+1}\quad \text{and}\quad \unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{11}^{\ast }(\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n})=c\cdot d_{n+1}^{m}\cdot \tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n+1}.\end{eqnarray}$$

The measures $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n}$ and $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n+1}$ (defined in (3.2.2)) appearing in (6.2.4) are restricted on some small neighbourhood of $\tilde{a}$ (respectively of $(\text{}\underline{a},b_{0})$ ). Let $A$ be the polydisc given by $A:=D_{n-1}(\text{}\underline{a},r_{1})\times D(a_{n},r_{2})$ for very small $r_{2}$ and much smaller $r_{1}$ . We claim that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{11}(A)\subset \unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{00}(A)$ . To see this, let $r_{2}$ be very small and we see that $f_{n}(D(a_{n},r_{2}))\sim D(a_{n},|\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}_{n}|r_{2})$ . As $|\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}|=|g^{\prime }(b_{0})|=1<|\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}_{n}|$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}_{n}=(\unicode[STIX]{x2202}h/\unicode[STIX]{x2202}x_{n})(\tilde{a})\neq 0$ , using (6.2.3) we can pick some very small $r_{2}$ and a much smaller $r_{1}$ such that

(6.2.5) $$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{11}(A)\subset D_{n-1}(\text{}\underline{a},r_{1})\times D(b_{0},r_{2}\cdot |\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}_{n}|\cdot |\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}_{n}|^{1/2})\subset \unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{00}(A).\end{eqnarray}$$

However, combining (6.2.4) with $d_{n}<d_{n+1}^{m}$ gives

$$\begin{eqnarray}\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n}(\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{11}(A))>\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n}(\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{00}(A)),\end{eqnarray}$$

which is a contradiction. This concludes the proof of Lemma 6.2.◻

6.3 A special sequence of tuples of positive integers

Now since $|\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}|>1$ and $|\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}_{i}|>1$ for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n$ , we can pick a sequence of tuples of positive integers $(j_{\ell },j_{1,\ell },\ldots ,j_{n,\ell })$ such that $j_{\ell }\rightarrow \infty$ as $\ell \rightarrow \infty$ and moreover,

(6.3.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\lim _{\ell \rightarrow \infty }\inf \frac{|\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}_{1}^{j_{1,\ell }}|}{|\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}^{j_{\ell }}|},\ldots ,\lim _{\ell \rightarrow \infty }\inf \frac{|\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}_{n-1}^{j_{1,\ell }}|}{|\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}^{j_{\ell }}|}\geqslant \lim _{\ell \rightarrow \infty }\frac{\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}_{n}^{j_{n,\ell }}}{\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}^{j_{\ell }}}=1.\end{eqnarray}$$

It will be useful later in our argument (see Lemma 6.8) that our sequence of tuples $(j_{\ell },j_{1,\ell },\ldots ,j_{n,\ell })$ satisfies the following arithmetic property in addition to (6.3.1). We want that for every $N\in \mathbb{N}$ , there exist $\ell _{2}>\ell _{1}>N$ such that

(6.3.2) $$\begin{eqnarray}j_{\ell _{2}}=j_{\ell _{1}}\quad \text{and}\quad j_{i,\ell _{2}}=j_{i,\ell _{1}}\quad \text{for }2\leqslant i\leqslant n\text{ while }j_{1,\ell _{2}}=j_{1,\ell _{1}}+1.\end{eqnarray}$$

In order to achieve (6.3.2), we may replace the original sequence of tuples $\{(j_{\ell },j_{1,\ell },\ldots ,j_{n,\ell })\}_{\ell =1}^{\infty }$ by the larger sequence $\{(j_{\ell }^{\prime },j_{1,\ell }^{\prime },\ldots ,j_{n,\ell }^{\prime })\}_{\ell =1}^{\infty }$ for which

$$\begin{eqnarray}j_{2\ell -1}^{\prime }=j_{2\ell }^{\prime }=j_{\ell }\quad \text{and}\quad j_{i,2\ell -1}^{\prime }=j_{i,2\ell }^{\prime }=j_{i,\ell }\end{eqnarray}$$

for $i=2,\ldots ,n$ , while

$$\begin{eqnarray}j_{1,2\ell -1}^{\prime }=j_{1,\ell }\quad \text{and}\quad j_{1,2\ell }^{\prime }=j_{1,\ell }+1\end{eqnarray}$$

and still the new sequence $\{(j_{\ell }^{\prime },j_{1,\ell }^{\prime },\ldots ,j_{n,\ell }^{\prime })\}_{\ell =1}^{\infty }$ satisfies (6.3.1) and the fact that $j_{\ell }\rightarrow \infty$ as $\ell \rightarrow \infty$ . For the sake of simplifying our notation, we will denote our new sequence of tuples also as $\{(j_{\ell },j_{1,\ell },\ldots ,j_{n,\ell })\}_{\ell =1}^{\infty }$ , but we note that this sequence of tuples satisfies (6.3.2).

6.4 Local symmetries for the Julia sets

From [Reference MilnorMil00], we know we can conjugate $f_{i}$ (for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n$ ) and $g$ to linear maps in small neighbourhoods of the repelling fixed points. More precisely, there exist holomorphic germs $\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{i}$ at $x=0$ satisfying

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{i}(0)=a_{i},\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{n+1}(0)=b_{0},\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{i}^{\prime }(0)=\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{n+1}^{\prime }(0)=1\quad \text{for }1\leqslant i\leqslant n\end{eqnarray}$$

and

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{i}^{-1}\circ f_{i}\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{i}(x)=\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}_{i}\cdot x\quad \text{for }1\leqslant i\leqslant n,\end{eqnarray}$$

while

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{n+1}^{-1}\circ g\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{n+1}(x)=\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}\cdot x.\end{eqnarray}$$

We notice that for $(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})$ in a neighbourhood of $\tilde{a}\in \mathbb{C}^{n}$ , we have an equality of germs:

$$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle g^{j_{\ell }}\circ h\circ (f_{1}^{-j_{1,\ell }}(x_{1}),\ldots ,f_{n}^{-j_{n,\ell }}(x_{n}))=\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{n+1}\circ \biggl(\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}^{j_{\ell }}\cdot h_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}}\biggl(\frac{\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{1}^{-1}(x_{1})}{\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}_{1}^{j_{1,\ell }}},\ldots ,\frac{\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{n}^{-1}(x_{n})}{\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}_{n}^{j_{n,\ell }}}\biggr)\biggr), & & \displaystyle \nonumber\end{eqnarray}$$

where $h_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}}:=\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{n+1}^{-1}\circ h\circ (\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{1},\ldots ,\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{n})$ and $f_{i}^{-1}$ is the germ of a branch of the inverse of $f_{i}$ at $x_{i}=a_{i}$ with $f_{i}^{-1}(a_{i})=a_{i}$ . So, using also (6.3.1), then for very small $r_{0}>0$ and all $\tilde{x}$ in the ball $B(\tilde{a},r_{0})\subset \mathbb{C}^{n}$ of radius $r_{0}$ , the map

$$\begin{eqnarray}\tilde{x}\mapsto g^{j_{\ell }}\circ h\circ (f_{1}^{-j_{1,\ell }},\ldots ,f_{n}^{-j_{n,\ell }})(\tilde{x})\end{eqnarray}$$

is well defined and uniformly bounded on $B(\tilde{a},r_{0})$ for all $\ell \geqslant 1$ . Next, we construct the function

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}(\tilde{x}):=(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n-1},h(\tilde{x}))\end{eqnarray}$$

for $\tilde{x}=(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n})$ , which is locally one-to-one at $\tilde{x}=\tilde{a}$ since $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}_{n}=(\unicode[STIX]{x2202}h/\unicode[STIX]{x2202}x_{n})(\tilde{a})\neq 0$ . Shrinking $r_{0}$ if necessary, we let

(6.4.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle \unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}_{\ell }(\tilde{x}) & := & \displaystyle \unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}^{-1}\circ (x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n-1},g^{j_{\ell }}\circ h\circ (f_{1}^{-j_{1,\ell }},\ldots ,f_{n}^{-j_{n,\ell }})(\tilde{x}))\nonumber\\ \displaystyle & =: & \displaystyle (x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n-1},h_{\ell }(\tilde{x}))\end{eqnarray}$$

for all $\tilde{x}\in B(\tilde{a},r_{0})$ and all $\ell \geqslant 1$ , where $h_{\ell }$ is some local analytic function on $B(\tilde{a},r_{0})$ satisfying (6.4.1).

Lemma 6.3. The family of functions $\{h_{\ell }(\tilde{x})\}_{\ell \geqslant 1}$ restricted on $B(\tilde{a},r_{0})$ is a normal family.

Proof of Lemma 6.3.

Since $\tilde{x}\mapsto g^{j_{\ell }}\circ h\circ (f_{1}^{-j_{1,\ell }},\ldots ,f_{n}^{-j_{n,\ell }})(\tilde{x})$ is uniformly bounded on $B(\tilde{a},r_{0})$ for all $\ell \geqslant 1$ , then that $h_{\ell }$ (defined as in (6.4.1)) is uniformly bounded on $B(\tilde{a},r_{0})$ , i.e., there exist $R>0$ such that

$$\begin{eqnarray}h_{\ell }(B(\tilde{a},r_{0}))\subset B(b_{0},R)\subset \mathbb{C}\end{eqnarray}$$

for all $\ell \geqslant 1$ . Hence $h_{\ell }$ is a distance non-increasing map from $B(\tilde{a},r)$ (with respect to the Bergman metric) to $B(b_{0},R)$ (with respect to the hyperbolic metric). Thus $\{h_{\ell }(\tilde{x})\}_{\ell \geqslant 1}$ is equicontinuous on $B(\tilde{a},r_{0})$ , or equivalently, $\{h_{\ell }(\tilde{x})\}_{\ell \geqslant 1}$ is a normal family.◻

From Lemma 6.3, we can pick a subsequence of $\{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}_{\ell }\}_{\ell \geqslant 1}$ which converges uniformly on $B(\tilde{a},r_{0})$ . By passing to a subsequence, without loss of generality, we can assume that the sequence $\{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}_{\ell }\}_{\ell \geqslant 1}$ itself converges uniformly to

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}_{0}(\tilde{x}):=\lim _{\ell \rightarrow \infty }\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}_{\ell }(\tilde{x})\end{eqnarray}$$

and satisfies (6.3.2) with $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}_{0}(\tilde{a})=\tilde{a}$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}_{0}(\tilde{x})=:(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n-1},h_{0}(\tilde{x}))$ . Since

$$\begin{eqnarray}\frac{\unicode[STIX]{x2202}h_{0}}{\unicode[STIX]{x2202}x_{n}}(\tilde{a})=\lim _{\ell \rightarrow \infty }\frac{\unicode[STIX]{x2202}h_{\ell }}{\unicode[STIX]{x2202}x_{n}}(\tilde{a})=\lim _{\ell \rightarrow \infty }\frac{\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}^{j_{\ell }}}{\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}_{n}^{j_{n,\ell }}}=1\neq 0,\end{eqnarray}$$

the map $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}_{0}$ is locally one-to-one at $\tilde{x}=\tilde{a}$ . Shrinking $r_{0}$ if necessary, we can further assume that the sequence of maps

(6.4.2) $$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}_{0}^{-1}\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D6F9}_{\ell }(\tilde{x})=:(x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n-1},\hbar _{\ell }(\tilde{x}))=:\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{\ell }(\tilde{x})\end{eqnarray}$$

converges uniformly to the identity map on $B(\tilde{a},r_{0})$ as $\ell \rightarrow \infty$ . The next goal is to show that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{\ell }$ is the identity map for all large $\ell$ ; see Lemma 6.7.

6.5 Equal currents

Proposition 6.4. Let $r_{1}$ and $r_{2}$ be positive real numbers and let $u_{1},\ldots ,u_{n}$ and $u$ be continuous subharmonic functions on $D(0,r_{1})$ , respectively on $D(0,r_{2})$ . Let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D703}$ be a holomorphic map from $D_{n}(\tilde{0},r_{1})$ to $D(0,r_{2})$ and moreover, assume the following two $(n,n)$ -currents satisfy the relation:

$$\begin{eqnarray}dd^{c}u_{1}(x_{1})\wedge \cdots \wedge dd^{c}u_{n}(x_{n})=c_{0}\cdot dd^{c}u_{1}(x_{1})\wedge \cdots \wedge dd^{c}u_{n-1}(x_{n-1})\wedge dd^{c}u\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D703}(\tilde{x})\end{eqnarray}$$

on $D_{n}(\tilde{0},r_{1})$ for some constant $c_{0}>0$ . Then for any given point $\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}}$ in the support of $dd^{c}u_{1}(x_{1})\wedge \cdots \wedge dd^{c}u_{n-1}(x_{n-1})$ , we have the following equality of $(1,1)$ -currents on $D(0,r_{1})$ :

$$\begin{eqnarray}dd^{c}u_{n}(x_{n})=c_{0}\cdot dd^{c}u\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D703}(\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}},x_{n}).\end{eqnarray}$$

Proof of Proposition 6.4.

Let $\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}}$ be a point in the support of $dd^{c}u_{1}(x_{1})\wedge \cdots \wedge dd^{c}u_{n-1}(x_{n-1})$ . It suffices to show that for any $C^{\infty }$ real function $\unicode[STIX]{x1D711}$ with compact support on $D(0,r_{1})$ , one has

$$\begin{eqnarray}\int _{D(0,r_{1})}\unicode[STIX]{x1D711}(x_{n})\,dd^{c}u_{n}(x_{n})=c_{0}\int _{D(0,r_{1})}\unicode[STIX]{x1D711}(x_{n})\,dd^{c}u\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D703}(\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}},x_{n}).\end{eqnarray}$$

To see this, we let $\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}$ be the measure on $D_{n-1}(\text{}\underline{0},r_{1})$ with

$$\begin{eqnarray}d\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}(\text{}\underline{x}):=c_{0}\cdot dd^{c}u_{1}(x_{1})\wedge \cdots \wedge dd^{c}u_{n-1}(x_{n-1})\end{eqnarray}$$

and let $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}$ be the measure on $D_{n}(\tilde{0},r_{1})$ with

$$\begin{eqnarray}d\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}(\tilde{x}):=d\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}(\text{}\underline{x})\wedge \frac{dx_{n}\wedge d\bar{x}_{n}}{-4\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}i}\end{eqnarray}$$

.

For each small positive real number $r$ , we let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}(\text{}\underline{x})$ be a $C^{\infty }$ -function on $D_{n-1}(\text{}\underline{0},r_{1})$ satisfying the properties:

  • $0\leqslant \unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}\leqslant 1$ ;

  • $\unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}$ is supported on $D_{n-1}(\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}},r)$ ; and

  • $\unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}=1$ on $D_{n-1}(\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}},r/2)$ .

From the proportionality assumption of the two $(n,n)$ -currents, we get

(6.5.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle \frac{1}{c_{0}}\biggl(\int \unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}\,d\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}\biggr)\int \unicode[STIX]{x1D711}\,dd^{c}u_{n} & = & \displaystyle \frac{1}{c_{0}}\int \unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}(\text{}\underline{x})\unicode[STIX]{x1D711}(x_{n})\,d\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}(\text{}\underline{x})\wedge dd^{c}u_{n}(x_{n})\nonumber\\ \displaystyle & = & \displaystyle \int \unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}(\text{}\underline{x})\unicode[STIX]{x1D711}(x_{n})\,d\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}(\text{}\underline{x})\wedge dd^{c}u\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D703}(\tilde{x})\nonumber\\ \displaystyle & = & \displaystyle \int u\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D703}(\tilde{x})\,d\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}\wedge dd^{c}(\unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}\unicode[STIX]{x1D711})\nonumber\\ \displaystyle & = & \displaystyle \int \unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}(\text{}\underline{x})u\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D703}(\tilde{x})\triangle \unicode[STIX]{x1D711}(x_{n})\,d\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}(\tilde{x})\end{eqnarray}$$

where $\triangle$ is the Laplacian and the right-hand side is integrated over the domain $D_{n}(\tilde{0},r_{1})$ . Similarly we derive that

$$\begin{eqnarray}\biggl(\int \unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}\,d\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}\biggr)\int \unicode[STIX]{x1D711}\,dd^{c}u\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D703}(\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}},x_{n})=\int \unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}(\text{}\underline{x})u\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D703}(\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}},x_{n})\triangle \unicode[STIX]{x1D711}(x_{n})\,d\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}(\tilde{x}).\end{eqnarray}$$

Now let

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6E9}_{r}(\tilde{x}):=\unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}(\text{}\underline{x})\cdot (u\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D703}(\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}},x_{n})-u\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D703}(\tilde{x}))\cdot \triangle \unicode[STIX]{x1D711}(x_{n})\end{eqnarray}$$

which is supported on $D_{n-1}(\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}},r)\times D(0,r_{1})$ . Hence as $u\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D703}$ is continuous and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D711}$ has compact support on $D(0,r_{1})$ , there exist constants $\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}_{r}\rightarrow 0$ as $r\rightarrow 0$ such that for any $\tilde{x}\in D_{n}(\tilde{0},r_{1})$ , we have

$$\begin{eqnarray}|\unicode[STIX]{x1D6E9}_{r}(\tilde{x})|\leqslant \unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}(\text{}\underline{x})\cdot \unicode[STIX]{x1D716}_{r}.\end{eqnarray}$$

Consequently

$$\begin{eqnarray}\biggl|\frac{1}{c_{0}}\int \unicode[STIX]{x1D711}\,dd^{c}u_{n}-\int \unicode[STIX]{x1D711}\,dd^{c}u\circ \unicode[STIX]{x1D703}(\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}},x_{n})\biggr|\leqslant \frac{\int _{D_{n}(\tilde{0},r_{1})}\unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}(\text{}\underline{x})\cdot \unicode[STIX]{x1D716}_{r}\,d\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}(\tilde{x})}{\int _{D_{n-1}(\text{}\underline{0},r_{1})}\unicode[STIX]{x1D702}_{r}(\text{}\underline{x})\,d\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}(\text{}\underline{x})}=\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}_{r}\cdot c_{1}\end{eqnarray}$$

with $c_{1}=\int _{D(0,r_{1})}1\cdot (dx_{n}\wedge d\bar{x}_{n})/(-4\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}i)$ . Now letting $r\rightarrow 0$ , the conclusion in Proposition 6.4 follows.◻

6.6 The rational functions must be exceptional

The next result yields half of the conclusion in Theorem 6.1 by showing that if $f_{n+1}$ is an exceptional rational function, then each $f_{i}$ is exceptional, and moreover, each $f_{i}$ is either Lattèes or not, depending on whether $f_{n+1}$ is a Lattès map, or not.

Corollary 6.5. The following statements hold:

  • if $f_{n+1}$ is conjugate to a monomial or a $\pm$ Chebyshev polynomial, then each $f_{i}$ (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ) is conjugate to a monomial or a $\pm$ Chebyshev polynomial.

  • if $f_{n+1}$ is a Lattès map, then each $f_{i}$ is a Lattès map.

Proof of Corollary 6.5.

So, we assume that $f_{n+1}$ is exceptional. Without loss of generality, we show that $f_{n}$ is exceptional as well and moreover, it is Lattès if and only if $f_{n+1}$ is a Lattès map. Since $f_{i}$ (and $f_{n+1}$ ) has continuous potential near $a_{i}$ (respectively near $b_{0}$ ) and moreover, $a_{i}\in J_{f_{i}}$ which is the support of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{i}}$ , then Proposition 6.4 along with the hypotheses of Theorem 6.1 yield that the map $h(\text{}\underline{a},\cdot )$ which sends a neighbourhood of $a_{n}\in J_{f_{n}}$ to a neighbourhood of $b_{0}\in J_{f_{n+1}}$ preserves the measures up to a scaling, i.e., for some $c>0$

(6.6.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}h^{\ast }(\text{}\underline{a},\cdot )\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{n+1}}=c\cdot \unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f_{n}}.\end{eqnarray}$$

In [Reference LevinLev90, Theorem 1], it was shown that there exists an infinite non-trivial family of symmetries on $J_{f}$ if and only if $f$ is post-critically finite with parabolic orbifold; hence (6.6.1) (see also § 3.3) yields that $f_{n}$ must be exceptional.

By a theorem of Zdunik [Reference ZdunikZdu90], a rational function $f$ is Lattès if and only if $J_{f}$ is $\mathbb{P}^{1}$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{f}$ is absolutely continuous with respect to Lebesgue measure on $\mathbb{P}^{1}$ ; therefore, (6.6.1) yields that $f_{n}$ is Lattès if $f_{n+1}$ is Lattès.

Assume that $f_{n+1}$ is conjugate either to a monomial or $\pm$ Chebyshev polynomial. Then (6.6.1) yields that $J_{f_{n}}$ is a one-dimensional topological space of Hausdorff dimension $1$ . According to Hamilton [Reference HamiltonHam95], a Julia set which is a one-dimensional topological manifold must be either a circle, closed line segment (up to an automorphism of $\mathbb{P}^{1}$ ) or of Hausdorff dimension greater than one; thus $J_{f_{n}}$ is itself a circle or a closed line segment (up to an automorphism of $\mathbb{P}^{1}$ ). This yields that $f_{n}$ must be conjugated to a monomial or a $\pm$ Chebyshev polynomial, which concludes the proof of Corollary 6.5.◻

6.7 Conclusion of our arguments

Corollary 6.5 yields that all we have left to prove in Theorem 6.1 is that $f_{n+1}$ must be exceptional. So, from now on, we assume that $f_{n+1}$ is non-exceptional and we will derive a contradiction.

Lemma 6.6. Let ${\mathcal{S}}$ be the family of symmetries of $J_{f_{n}}$ on $D(a_{n},r)$ for some $r>0$ . Then there exists $\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}>0$ such that for any $\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}\in {\mathcal{S}}$ with

$$\begin{eqnarray}\sup _{x\in B(a_{n},r)}|\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}(x)-x|<\unicode[STIX]{x1D716},\end{eqnarray}$$

we must have $\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}(x)\equiv x$ for $x\in D(a_{n},r)$ .

Proof of Lemma 6.6.

Suppose this lemma is not true, then there exists a sequence of integers $\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}_{\ell }>0$ with $\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}_{\ell }\rightarrow 0$ as $\ell$ tends to infinity, and a sequence of functions $\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}_{\ell }\in {\mathcal{S}}$ , which are not the identity map, such that

(6.7.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\sup _{x\in D(a_{n},r)}|\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}_{\ell }(x)-x|=\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}_{\ell }.\end{eqnarray}$$

Consequently, $\{\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}_{\ell }(x)\}_{\ell \geqslant 1}$ is a normal family with no subsequence having a constant limit (because $\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}_{\ell }$ tends to the identity map as $\ell \rightarrow \infty$ ). By Levin’s result [Reference LevinLev90], $\{\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}_{\ell }\}_{\ell \geqslant 1}$ must consist of finitely many elements, which is a contradiction because there are infinitely many distinct real numbers $\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}_{\ell }$ as in (6.7.1).◻

Lemma 6.7. There exists $N\in \mathbb{N}$ , such that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{\ell }$ is the identity map on $B(\tilde{a},r_{0})$ for all $\ell \geqslant N$ .

Proof of Lemma 6.7.

By abuse of notation, let $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n+1}$ and $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n}$ be the measures $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n+1}$ and $\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n}$ in (3.2.2) restricted on $D_{n}(\tilde{a},r_{1})$ and respectively, on $D_{n}(\tilde{b},r_{2})$ for $\tilde{b}=(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n-1},b_{0})$ and small radii $r_{1},r_{2}$ . Since $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n}=\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n+1}$ , there exist constants $c_{\ell }>0$ , such that

$$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{\ell }^{\ast }(\tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n+1})=c_{\ell }\cdot \tilde{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n+1}.\end{eqnarray}$$

By Proposition 6.4, we see that for any $\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}}$ in $D_{n-1}(\text{}\underline{a},r_{1})\cap J_{f_{1}}\times \cdots \times J_{f_{n-1}}$ , the map $\hbar _{\ell }(\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}},\cdot )$ is a symmetry of $J_{f_{n}}$ on $D(a_{n},r_{2})$ . Moreover, the functions $\hbar _{\ell }(\tilde{x})$ converge uniformly to $\hbar (\tilde{x}):=x_{n}$ on $D_{n}(\tilde{a},r_{1})$ as $\ell$ tends to infinity. Applying Lemma 6.6, there exists $N\in \mathbb{N}$ , such that for any $\ell \geqslant N$ and any $\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}}$ in $D_{n-1}(\text{}\underline{a},r_{1})\cap (J_{f_{1}}\times \cdots \times J_{f_{n-1}})$ , we have

$$\begin{eqnarray}\hbar _{\ell }(\text{}\underline{\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}},x_{n})=x_{n}\end{eqnarray}$$

for each $x_{n}\in D(a_{n},r_{1})$ . Since $a_{i}$ is an accumulating point in $J_{f_{i}}$ for each $i$ (see [Reference MilnorMil00]), when $\ell \geqslant N$ , the zero locus of the equation $\hbar _{\ell }(\tilde{x})-x_{n}=0$ on $D_{n}(\tilde{a},r_{1})$ cannot have dimension ${\leqslant}n-1$ , i.e., $\hbar _{\ell }(\tilde{x})$ is identically equal to $x_{n}$ and so, $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}_{\ell }$ is the identity map. This concludes the proof of Lemma 6.7.◻

Let $N$ be the positive integer appearing in Lemma 6.7. Pick $\ell _{2}>\ell _{1}>N$ with $j_{\ell _{2}}\geqslant j_{\ell _{1}}$ and $j_{i,\ell _{2}}\geqslant j_{i,\ell _{1}}$ for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n$ . Let

$$\begin{eqnarray}m_{i}:=j_{i,\ell _{2}}-j_{i,\ell _{1}}\quad \text{for }1\leqslant i\leqslant n\quad \text{and}\quad m_{n+1}:=j_{\ell _{2}}-j_{\ell _{1}}.\end{eqnarray}$$

Lemma 6.8. With the above notation for $m_{i}$ , let

$$\begin{eqnarray}H^{\prime }:=(f_{1}^{m_{1}},\ldots ,f_{n+1}^{m_{n+1}})(H)\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})_{\mathbb{ C}}^{n+1}.\end{eqnarray}$$

Then $(f_{1}^{m_{1}},\ldots ,f_{n+1}^{m_{n+1}})(H^{\prime })=H^{\prime }$ .

Proof of Lemma 6.8.

From Lemma 6.7 (see also (6.4.1)), we have that

$$\begin{eqnarray}g^{j_{\ell _{1}}}\circ h\circ (f_{1}^{-j_{1,\ell _{1}}},\ldots ,f_{n}^{-j_{n,\ell _{1}}})(\tilde{x})=g^{j_{\ell _{2}}}\circ h\circ (f_{1}^{-j_{1,\ell _{2}}},\ldots ,f_{n}^{-j_{n,\ell _{2}}})(\tilde{x})\end{eqnarray}$$

on $D_{n}(\tilde{a},r_{0})$ , or equivalently

(6.7.2) $$\begin{eqnarray}h(\tilde{x})=g^{m_{n+1}}\circ h\circ (f_{1}^{-m_{1}},\ldots ,f_{n}^{-m_{n}})(\tilde{x}).\end{eqnarray}$$

Let

$$\begin{eqnarray}h^{\prime }(\tilde{x}):=f_{n+1}^{m_{n+1}}\circ h\circ (f_{1}^{-m_{1}},\ldots ,f_{n}^{-m_{n}})(\tilde{x})\end{eqnarray}$$

on a neighbourhood of $\tilde{a}$ . Now consider the analytic equation

$$\begin{eqnarray}h^{\prime }(\tilde{x})-x_{n+1}=0\end{eqnarray}$$

on a neighbourhood of $(\tilde{a},b_{1})\in \mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}}^{n}\times \mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}}^{1}$ . The zero set of this equation is an analytic set of dimension $n$ passing through the point $(\tilde{a},b_{1})$ . For $\tilde{x}$ close to $\tilde{a}$ , the points of the form $(\tilde{x},h^{\prime }(\tilde{x}))$ lie on the hypersurface $H^{\prime }$ . Combining (6.2.1) and (6.7.2), we get

$$\begin{eqnarray}h^{\prime }\circ (f_{1}^{m_{1}},\ldots ,f_{n}^{m_{n}})(\tilde{x})=f^{m_{n+1}}\circ h^{\prime }(\tilde{x}).\end{eqnarray}$$

Hence for points $\tilde{x}$ close to $\tilde{a}$ , the points $(f_{1}^{m_{1}},\ldots ,f_{n+1}^{m_{n+1}})(\tilde{x},h^{\prime }(\tilde{x}))$ , which are points on $(f_{1}^{m_{1}},\ldots ,f_{n+1}^{m_{n+1}})(H^{\prime })$ satisfy also the equation $h^{\prime }(\tilde{x})-x_{n+1}=0$ . Finally, as both $H^{\prime }$ and $(f_{1}^{m_{1}},\ldots ,f_{n+1}^{m_{n+1}})(H^{\prime })$ share an analytic set of dimension $n$ in a neighbourhood of $(\tilde{a},b_{1})$ , they must be identical. So $H^{\prime }$ is fixed by the endomorphism $(f_{1}^{m_{1}},\ldots ,f_{n+1}^{m_{n+1}})$ of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n+1}$ , as desired.◻

We recall that our sequence of tuples $(j_{\ell },j_{1,\ell },\ldots ,j_{n,\ell })$ satisfies condition (6.3.2). Therefore, we can choose some integers $\ell _{2}>\ell _{1}>N$ such that $j_{\ell _{2}}=j_{\ell _{1}}$ and also, $j_{i,\ell _{2}}=j_{i,\ell _{1}}$ for $i=2,\ldots ,n$ , while $j_{1,\ell _{2}}=j_{1,\ell _{1}}+1$ and then apply Lemma 6.8 to the tuple of integers

$$\begin{eqnarray}m_{i}:=j_{i,\ell _{2}}-j_{i,\ell _{1}}\quad \text{for }1\leqslant i\leqslant n\quad \text{and}\quad m_{n+1}:=j_{\ell _{2}}-j_{\ell _{1}}.\end{eqnarray}$$

We have that $m_{i}=0$ for each $i=2,\ldots ,n+1$ , while $m_{1}=1$ . Therefore, Lemma 6.8 yields that

(6.7.3) $$\begin{eqnarray}(f_{1}^{2},\text{id},\ldots ,\text{id})(H)=(f_{1},\text{id},\ldots ,\text{id})(H),\end{eqnarray}$$

where the action in (6.7.3) on coordinates $x_{i}$ for $2\leqslant i\leqslant n+1$ is given by the corresponding identity maps. Equation (6.7.3) yields that $H$ is a hypersurface of the form $\mathbb{P}^{1}\times H_{0}$ (for some hypersurface $H_{0}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ ), contradicting thus our hypothesis that $H$ projects dominantly onto any subset of $n$ coordinate axes. Hence $f_{n+1}$ (and thus each of the $f_{i}$ , as shown in Corollary 6.5) must be exceptional; this concludes our proof of Theorem 6.1.◻

7 Conclusion of our proof

In this section we finish our proof of Theorem 2.2 and then we prove Theorem 1.4. Since we showed in Proposition 2.1 that it suffices to assume in Theorems 1.11.2 and 1.3 that the subvariety $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is a hypersurface projecting dominantly onto each subset of $(n-1)$ coordinate axes, then this will conclude our proof for each one of those theorems; note that we proved the above three theorems in § 2.3 as a consequence of Theorem 2.2.

Proof of Theorem 2.2.

So, we have a hypersurface $H\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ (for some integer $n>2$ ) containing a Zariski dense set of points satisfying either hypothesis (1) or hypothesis (2) in Theorem 2.2. Furthermore, $H$ projects dominantly onto any subset of $(n-1)$ coordinate axes of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ . We let $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i}$ (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ) be the measures introduced in § 3.2.

Lemma 7.1. We have $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{1}=\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{2}=\cdots =\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n}$ .

Proof of Lemma 7.1.

If each $f_{i}$ and also $H$ are defined over $\bar{\mathbb{Q}}$ (i.e., hypothesis (2) in Theorem 2.2 is met), then the conclusion of Lemma 7.1 follows immediately from Theorem 5.1. So, assume now that each $f_{i}$ and also $H$ are defined over $\mathbb{C}$ , and moreover hypothesis (1) in Theorem 2.2 is met; in particular, $\deg (f_{1})=\deg (f_{2})=\cdots =\deg (f_{n})$ . We prove the result in this general case using a specialization technique similar to the one employed in the proof of Claim 5.5.

So, we let $K$ be a finitely generated subfield of $\mathbb{C}$ such that each $f_{i}$ and also $H$ are defined over $K$ , and let $\overline{K}$ be a fixed algebraic closure of $K$ in $\mathbb{C}$ . We know there exists an infinite sequence $S:=\{(x_{1,j},\ldots ,x_{n,j})\}\subset H(\mathbb{C})$ such that each $x_{i,j}$ is a preperiodic point for $f_{i}$ for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ and for each $j\geqslant 1$ . Then the functions $f_{i}$ are base changes of endomorphisms $f_{i,K}$ of $\mathbb{P}_{K}^{1}$ (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ); similarly, $S$ is the base change of a subset $S_{K}\subset H(\overline{K})$ . We can further extend $f_{i,K}$ to endomorphisms

$$\begin{eqnarray}f_{i,U}:\mathbb{P}_{U}^{1}\longrightarrow \mathbb{P}_{U}^{1}\end{eqnarray}$$

over a variety $U$ over $\mathbb{Q}$ of finite type and with function field $K$ . For each geometric point $t\in U(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ , the objects $f_{i,U}$ and $S_{U}$ have reductions $f_{i,t}$ and $S_{t}$ such that $S_{t}$ consists of points with coordinates preperiodic under the action of the $f_{i,U}$ . We also let $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i,t}$ (for $i=1,\ldots ,n$ ) be the probability measures on $H_{t}$ obtained as pullback through the usual projection map onto $(n-1)$ coordinates (with the exception of the $i$ th coordinate axis) of the invariant measures on $(\mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}}^{1})^{n-1}$ corresponding to each $f_{j,t}$ for $j\neq i$ . As proven in Claim 5.5 (using [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZb, Theorem 4.7] and also [Reference Yuan and ZhangYZa, Lemma 3.2.3]), we obtain that the subset $S_{t}\subset H_{t}$ is still Zariski dense for all the $\bar{\mathbb{Q}}$ -points $t$ in a dense open subset $U_{0}\subseteq U$ . Thus, as proven in Theorem 5.1, we conclude that

$$\begin{eqnarray}\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{1,t}=\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{2,t}=\cdots =\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n,t}\end{eqnarray}$$

for each $t\in U_{0}(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ . Since $U_{0}(\bar{\mathbb{Q}})$ is dense in $U(\mathbb{C})$ with respect to the usual Archimedean topology, while the measures $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{i,t}$ vary continuously with the parameter $t$ (since from the construction, the potential functions of these measures vary continuously with the coefficients of $f_{i,t}$ ), we conclude that

$$\begin{eqnarray}\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{1,t}=\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{2,t}=\cdots =\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n,t}\end{eqnarray}$$

for all points in $U(\mathbb{C})$ including the point corresponding to the original embedding $K\subset \mathbb{C}$ . Thus $\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{1}=\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{2}=\cdots =\hat{\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}}_{n}$ , which concludes the proof of Lemma 7.1.◻

Lemma 7.1 yields that the hypotheses of Proposition 5.2 are met and so, we know that there exists an index $i$ , which we assume (without loss of generality) to be $n$ so that for each $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}:=(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n})\in H(\mathbb{C})$ , if $a_{i}$ is preperiodic under the action of $f_{i}$ for $i=1,\ldots ,n-1$ , then also $a_{n}$ is preperiodic under the action of $f_{n}$ .

Since all but finitely many periodic points of a rational map are repelling, and also, there is a Zariski dense open subset of points $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}\in H$ such that the restriction of the natural projection map $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}|_{H}:H\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ on the first $(n-1)$ coordinate axes is unramified, then we can find a point $(x_{1,0},\ldots ,x_{n,0})\in H(\mathbb{C})$ satisfying the following properties:

  1. (a) $x_{i,0}$ is a periodic repelling point for $f_{i}$ for each $i=1,\ldots ,n-1$ ; and

  2. (b) there is a non-constant holomorphic germ $h_{0}$ defined in a neighbourhood of $\tilde{x}_{0}:=(x_{1,0},\ldots ,x_{n-1,0})$ , with $h_{0}(\tilde{x}_{0})=x_{n,0}$ and $(\tilde{x},h_{0}(\tilde{x}))\in H(\mathbb{C})$ for all $\tilde{x}$ in a small neighbourhood of $\tilde{x}_{0}$ . Moreover, we also have that

    (7.0.1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\frac{\unicode[STIX]{x2202}h_{0}}{\unicode[STIX]{x2202}x_{i}}(\tilde{x}_{0})\neq 0\quad \text{for each }i=1,\ldots ,n-1.\end{eqnarray}$$

Note that hypothesis (7.0.1) can be achieved since the points satisfying $(\unicode[STIX]{x2202}h/\unicode[STIX]{x2202}x_{i})=0$ live in a proper Zariski closed subset of $H$ (i.e., inequality (7.0.2) is an open condition which can be seen from computing the partial derivatives using implicit functions). It is essential in this case to know that $H$ projects dominantly onto each subset of $(n-1)$ coordinates, i.e., $H$ is not of the form $\mathbb{P}^{1}\times H_{0}$ for some hypersurface $H_{0}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ since otherwise condition (7.0.1) would not necessarily hold.

Proposition 5.2 and condition (a) above yield that $x_{n,0}$ is preperiodic for $f_{n}$ . At the expense of replacing each $f_{i}$ by $f_{i}^{\ell }$ (for a suitable positive integer $\ell$ ), we may assume that:

  • $x_{i,0}$ is a repelling fixed point of $f_{i}$ for $1\leqslant i\leqslant n-1$ ;

  • $x_{n,1}:=f_{n}(x_{n,0})$ is a fixed point of $f_{n}$ ; and

  • there is a holomorphic germ $h(\tilde{x})$ near $\tilde{x}_{0}=(x_{1,0},\ldots ,x_{n-1,0})$ with $h(\tilde{x}_{0})=x_{n,0}$ , and $(\tilde{x},h(\tilde{x}))\in H(\mathbb{C})$ for all $\tilde{x}\in (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}(\mathbb{C})$ in a small (complex analytic) neighbourhood of $\tilde{x}_{0}$ . Moreover, for each $i=1,\ldots ,n-1$ we have that

    (7.0.2) $$\begin{eqnarray}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}_{i}:=\frac{\unicode[STIX]{x2202}h}{\unicode[STIX]{x2202}x_{i}}(\tilde{x}_{0})\neq 0.\end{eqnarray}$$

Then all hypotheses in Theorem 6.1 are met; this yields that each $f_{i}$ must be either all conjugate to monomials and $\pm$ Chebyshev polynomials, or they are all Lattès maps, which concludes our proof of Theorem 2.2.◻

We finish our paper by proving Theorem 1.4.

Proof of Theorem 1.4.

First we observe (similar to the proof of Proposition 2.1) that it suffices to prove that each irreducible, preperiodic hypersurface $H\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is of the form $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{i,j}^{-1}(C_{i,j})$ (for a pair of indices $i,j\in \{1,\ldots ,n\}$ ), where $C_{i,j}\subset \mathbb{P}^{1}\times \mathbb{P}^{1}$ is a curve, which is preperiodic under the action of $(x_{i},x_{j})\mapsto (f_{i}(x_{i}),f_{j}(x_{j}))$ (and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}_{i,j}$ is the projection of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ onto the $(i,j)$ th coordinate axes). Indeed, just as in the proof of Proposition 2.1, we obtain that any preperiodic subvariety $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is a component of an intersection of preperiodic hypersurfaces, thus reducing our proof to the case $V$ is a hypersurface.

Since the case $n=2$ was proved in [Reference Ghioca, Nguyen and YeGNY17, Theorem 1.1], from now on, we assume $V\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ is a hypersurface and $n>2$ . Then, at the expense of replacing $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}=(f_{1},\ldots ,f_{n})$ by an iterate of it and also replacing the hypersurface $V$ by a suitable $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}^{k}(V)$ (for $k\in \mathbb{N}$ ), we may (and do) assume that $V$ is invariant under the action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ . Also, we may assume $V$ projects dominantly onto each subset of $(n-1)$ coordinate axes of $(\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n}$ since otherwise $V=\mathbb{P}^{1}\times V_{0}$ and then we can argue inductively on $n$ (because $V_{0}\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ would be invariant under the induced action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ on those $(n-1)$ coordinate axes). Next we will prove there are no such hypersurfaces, thus providing the desired conclusion in Theorem 1.4.

We let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}|_{V}:V\longrightarrow (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ be the projection on the first $n-1$ coordinate axes; we know there exists a Zariski open subset $U\subset (\mathbb{P}^{1})^{n-1}$ such that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}|_{V}^{-1}(\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD})$ is finite for each $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}\in U$ .

Now, let $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}:=(a_{1},\ldots ,a_{n-1})\in U(\mathbb{C})$ such that each $a_{i}$ is periodic under the action of $f_{i}$ . We claim that each point $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}\in V(\mathbb{C})$ satisfying $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}|_{V}(\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC})=\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}$ is preperiodic under the action of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ , i.e., its last coordinate is preperiodic for $f_{n}$ . Indeed, since $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}$ is periodic, then for some positive integer $m$ , we have that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}^{m}(\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC})\in \unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}|_{V}^{-1}(\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD})$ and because $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}|_{V}^{-1}(\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD})$ is a finite set, we conclude that the last coordinate of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}$ (and therefore, $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}$ itself) must be preperiodic, as claimed.

At the expense of shrinking $U$ to a smaller, but still Zariski dense, open subset, we may even assume $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}|_{V}$ is unramified above each point of $U$ . Then we can argue as in the proof of Theorem 2.2 and find a point $(x_{1,0},\ldots ,x_{n,0})$ satisfying the conditions:

  1. (a) $x_{i,0}$ is a periodic repelling point for $f_{i}$ for each $i=1,\ldots ,n-1$ ; and

  2. (b) there is a non-constant holomorphic germ $h_{0}$ defined in a neighbourhood of $\tilde{x}_{0}:=(x_{1,0},\ldots ,x_{n-1,0})$ , with $h_{0}(\tilde{x}_{0})=x_{n,0}$ and $(\tilde{x},h_{0}(\tilde{x}))\in V(\mathbb{C})$ for all $\tilde{x}$ in a small neighbourhood of $\tilde{x}_{0}$ . Moreover, we also have that $(\unicode[STIX]{x2202}h_{0}/\unicode[STIX]{x2202}x_{i})(\tilde{x}_{0})\neq 0$ for each $i$ .

Furthermore, after replacing $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F7}$ by yet another iterate, we get that each $x_{i,0}$ is fixed by $f_{i}$ . Then we meet the hypotheses of Theorem 6.1 and since we assumed that each $f_{i}$ is non-exceptional, we derive a contradiction. This concludes our proof of Theorem 1.4.◻

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to Tom Tucker, Xinyi Yuan and Shouwu Zhang for very useful conversations. We also thank the referee for his/her many helpful comments and suggestions, which improved our presentation. The first author is partially supported by an NSERC Discovery Grant; the second author was supported by a PIMS and a UBC postdoctoral fellowship; the third author is partially supported by NSFC $11701508$ and Zhejiang NSFC R $18$ A $010001$ grants. We also thank the Fields Institute for its hospitality and support during the last stage when this project was finalized.

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