1 Introduction
Let f be a transcendental entire function. We consider the iterates of f, which we denote by $f^n$ , $n \geq 1$ . The complex plane is divided into two sets: the Fatou set, $F(f)$ , where the iterates $(f^n)$ form a normal family in a neighbourhood of every point, and its complement, the Julia set $J(f)$ . An introduction to the theory of iteration of transcendental entire and meromorphic functions can be found in [Reference BergweilerBer93].
The Fatou set is open and consists of connected components, which are called Fatou components. Fatou components can be periodic, preperiodic or wandering domains. A Fatou component U is called a wandering domain if $f^n(U) \cap f^m(U)= \emptyset ,$ for all $n\neq m$ . Although Sullivan showed in [Reference SullivanSul85] that rational maps have no wandering domains, transcendental entire functions can have wandering domains. The first example of such a function was given by Baker [Reference BakerBak76] who proved that a certain entire function given by an infinite product has a multiply connected wandering domain. Several examples of simply connected wandering domains have been constructed since then (see, for example, [Reference HermanHer84, p. 104], [Reference SullivanSul85, p. 414], [Reference BakerBak84, pp. 564 and 567], [Reference DevaneyDev90, p. 222], [Reference Eremenko and LjubichEL87, Examples 1 and 2], [Reference Fagella and HenriksenFH06]).
In [Reference Bergweiler, Rippon and StallardBRS13] the authors gave a complete description of the dynamical behaviour in multiply connected wandering domains. Recently, in [Reference Benini, Evdoridou, Fagella, Rippon and StallardBEF+21] the authors gave a detailed classification of simply connected wandering domains in terms of the hyperbolic distance between orbits of points and in terms of convergence to the boundary. More specifically, they classified simply connected wandering domains into contracting, semi-contracting and eventually isometric depending on whether, for almost all pairs of points in the wandering domain, the hyperbolic distances between the orbits of these points, tend to 0, decrease but do not tend to 0, or are eventually constant, respectively (see Theorem 5.1). In terms of convergence to the boundary, the orbits of all points stay away from the boundary, come arbitrarily close to the boundary but do not converge to it (bungee), or converge to the boundary (see Theorem 5.2). These two classifications give nine possible types of simply connected wandering domains. Using a new technique, based on approximation theory, they show that all of these nine possible types are indeed realizable.
All the examples constructed in [Reference Benini, Evdoridou, Fagella, Rippon and StallardBEF+21] were escaping wandering domains. Hence it is natural to ask whether there exist oscillating wandering domains of all nine types. (It remains a major open question as to whether it is possible to have wandering domains of bounded orbit.) A wandering domain U is called oscillating if there exist $(n_k), (m_k)$ such that $f^{n_k}(z) \to \infty $ and $(f^{m_k}(z))$ stays bounded for all $z \in U$ . Since in oscillating wandering domains the iterates of f have finite limit points in $J(f)$ , as well as $\infty $ , it is impossible for the orbit of a point in such a wandering domain to stay away from the boundary. Thus three of the nine possible types are not realizable. In this paper we show that the remaining six possible types of oscillating wandering domains are all realizable.
The first transcendental entire function with oscillating wandering domains was given by Eremenko and Lyubich in [Reference Eremenko and LjubichEL87]; this was also the first application of approximation theory in complex dynamics. The authors used sequences of discs and half-annuli and a model function which was constant on the half-annuli and a translation on the discs. This model function was approximated on the closure of every disc and half-annulus by a transcendental entire function using an extended version of Runge’s approximation theorem. Their technique did not show though whether their wandering domains are bounded or not, and did not give information on the degree of the entire function on each of the wandering domains.
Motivated by the construction in [Reference Eremenko and LjubichEL87], we adapt the new techniques from [Reference Benini, Evdoridou, Fagella, Rippon and StallardBEF+21] to construct bounded oscillating wandering domains, which, moreover, have the property that the degree of f on each of the wandering domains is equal to that of our model map. We state and prove our main construction theorem in §3.
It is worth pointing out that, in order for the wandering domains to be oscillating, the set-up needs to be much more complicated than that used for escaping wandering domains in [Reference Benini, Evdoridou, Fagella, Rippon and StallardBEF+21]. Although some of the building blocks of our proof are similar to those used in the analogous result for escaping wandering domains, the proof here requires several additional techniques. In particular, great care has to be taken over the accumulating errors in the approximation, as each of the discs on which the approximation takes place contains infinitely many domains in the orbit of the wandering domain.
In §5 we use the main construction theorem to construct all six types of oscillating wandering domains, proving the following result. This requires several preliminary results concerning Blaschke products which we prove in §4.
Theorem 1.1. For each of the six possible types of simply connected oscillating wandering domains, there exists a transcendental entire function with a bounded, simply connected oscillating wandering domain of that type.
Oscillating wandering domains for functions in the Eremenko–Lyubich class $\mathcal {B}$ have been constructed, first by Bishop in [Reference BishopBis15], using the novel technique of quasiconformal folding, and more recently in [Reference Boc ThalerBoc21, Reference Fagella, Jarque and LazebnikFJL19, Reference Martí-Pete and ShishikuraMPS20]. It would be interesting to see whether their methods can be adapted to classify the resulting wandering domains as one of the six possible types described above.
2 Preliminary results
In this section we give some existing results which are used in the proof of the main construction theorem. The following theorem, which is [Reference Benini, Evdoridou, Fagella, Rippon and StallardBEF+21, Theorem D], plays a key role in the proof. We say that a curve $\sigma $ surrounds a curve $\sigma '$ if $\sigma '$ is contained in a bounded complementary component of $\sigma $ . Also, for two compact sets $S, S'$ we say that S lies exterior to $S'$ if S is contained in the unbounded complementary component of $S'$ .
Theorem 2.1. Let f be a transcendental entire function and suppose that there exist Jordan curves $\gamma _n$ and $\Gamma _n$ , $n\ge 0$ , compact sets $L_k$ , $k\ge 0$ , and a bounded domain D such that:
-
(a) $\Gamma _n$ surrounds $\gamma _n$ , for $n \geq 0$ ;
-
(b) the sets $\Gamma _n$ , $n \geq 0$ , $L_k$ , $k \geq 0$ , and $\overline D$ all lie exterior to each other;
-
(c) $\gamma _{n+1}$ surrounds $f(\gamma _n)$ , for $n \geq 0$ ;
-
(d) $f(\Gamma _n)$ surrounds $\Gamma _{n+1}$ , for $n \geq 0$ ;
-
(e) $f(\overline D \cup \bigcup _{k\ge 0} L_k)\subset D$ ;
-
(f) there exists $n_k \to \infty $ such that
$$ \begin{align*}\max\{\operatorname{dist}(z,L_{k}): z \in \Gamma_{n_k}\} = o(\operatorname{dist}(\gamma_{n_k}, \Gamma_{n_k}))\quad \text{as}\; k \to \infty. \end{align*} $$
Then there exists an orbit of simply connected wandering domains $U_n$ such that $\overline {\operatorname {int} \gamma _n} \subset U_n \subset \operatorname {int}\Gamma _n$ , for $n \geq 0$ .
Moreover, if there exists $z_n \in \operatorname {int}\gamma _n$ such that both $f(\gamma _n)$ and $f(\Gamma _n)$ wind $d_n$ times around $f(z_n),$ then $f:U_n \to U_{n+1}$ has degree $d_n$ , for $n \geq 0$ .
In order to obtain the transcendental entire function with the required properties, we consider an analytic function which is our model function and then apply the following result which is an extension of the well-known Runge approximation theorem and was the Main Lemma in [Reference Eremenko and LjubichEL87].
Lemma 2.2. Let $(E_n)$ be a sequence of compact subsets of ${\mathbb C}$ with the following properties:
-
(i) ${\mathbb C} \setminus E_n$ is connected, for $n \geq 0$ ;
-
(ii) $E_n \cap E_m = \emptyset $ , for $n\neq m$ ;
-
(iii) $\min \{|z|: z\in E_n\} \to \infty $ as $n \to \infty $ .
Suppose $\psi $ is holomorphic on $E =\bigcup _{n=0}^{\infty } E_n$ . For $n \geq 0$ , let $\varepsilon _n>0$ and let $z_{n} \in E_n$ . Then there exists an entire function f satisfying, for $n \geq 0$ ,
Remark 2.3. We note that if the sets $E_n$ are each real-symmetric (that is, $\overline {E_n}=E_n$ ), the function $\psi $ is real-symmetric in E (that is, $\overline {\psi (\overline {z})}=\psi (z)$ , for $z \in E$ ), and the points $z_{n}, n\geq 0$ , are all real, then we can take the entire function f to be real-symmetric on ${\mathbb C}$ . Indeed, if f satisfies the conclusions of Lemma 2.2, then $g(z)=\tfrac 12(f(z)+\overline {f(\overline {z})})$ is real-symmetric and entire, and satisfies the conclusions of Lemma 2.2.
We also need the following result, which is a version of [Reference Eremenko and LjubichEL87, Lemma 2].
Lemma 2.4. Let g be an analytic function in the disc $\{z:|z|<R\}$ such that $g(0)=g'(0)=0$ and $|g(z)|<\epsilon R$ for $|z|<R$ and some $\epsilon < 1/4$ . Then
Finally, we need the following lemma about hyperbolic distances in discs, which is [Reference Benini, Evdoridou, Fagella, Rippon and StallardBEF+21, Lemma 5.2]. Here we define $D_r = D(0,r)$ and $\mathbb {D} = D_1$ .
Lemma 2.5. Suppose that $0<s<r<1<R$ and set
If $|z|,|w|\leq s$ , then
and
Also $0<c(s,R)<1$ , and if the variables s, r and R satisfy in addition
then
and
3 Main construction
In this section we state and prove our construction result. Throughout, $D(z,r)$ denotes the open disc with centre z and radius r.
Theorem 3.1. (Main construction)
Let $(b_{n})_{n\geq 0}$ be a sequence of Blaschke products of corresponding degree $d_n \geq 1$ , and let $(\alpha _n)_{n\geq 0}$ be a sequence of real numbers with $\alpha _0 = 1$ and $\alpha _{n+1}/\alpha _n \leq 1/6$ . For $n \geq 0$ , let
and
We consider the function
and define $V_m, \zeta _m$ and $\rho _m$ by
where $(\ell _n)$ is defined by $\ell _0=1 \mbox { and } \ell _{n+1}=\ell _n+n+3, \; n \geq 0.$
For a suitable choice of $(\alpha _n)$ , there exists a transcendental entire function f having an orbit of bounded, simply connected, oscillating wandering domains $U_m$ such that, for $m,n\geq 0$ :
-
(i) $\overline {D(\zeta _m,r_m)} \subset U_m \subset D(\zeta _m, R_m)$ , where $0<r_m<\rho _m<R_m$ , and $r_m\sim \rho _m$ and $R_m \sim \rho _m$ as $m \to \infty $ ;
-
(ii) $|f(z)-\varphi (z)|\leq \varepsilon _m$ on $\overline {D(\zeta _m, R_m)}$ , where $\varepsilon _0 \leq 1/24$ and $\varepsilon _{\ell _n+k} = {\alpha _{n+1}^2}/{2^{k+1}}$ , for $0\leq k \le n+2$ ;
-
(iii) $f(9n)=\varphi (9n)=9(n+1)$ and $f'(9n)=\varphi '(9n)= 1$ ;
-
(iv) $f:U_{m} \to U_{m+1}$ has degree $q_{m},$ where $q_{\ell _n}=d_n$ , and $q_m=1$ otherwise.
Finally, if $z, z' \in U_0$ and there exists $N \in {\mathbb N}$ such that $f^{\ell _N}(z), f^{\ell _N}(z') \in \overline {D(\kappa _N,r_{\ell _N})}$ , then, for $n \geq N$ , we have
where $0<k_n<1<K_n$ with $k_n,K_n \to 1$ as $n \to \infty $ .
Remark 3.2. If the Blaschke products $b_n$ are real-symmetric for each $n \geq 0$ , then f can be taken to be real-symmetric; see Remark 2.3.
Proof. We consider the sets $V_m = \varphi ^m(\Delta _0)$ , where $\Delta _0 = D(4,1)$ , as defined in the statement of Theorem 3.1, and construct a function f which is sufficiently close to $\varphi $ in parts of the plane in order to ensure that f has a bounded wandering domain U with $f^m(U)$ close to $V_m$ , for $m\ge 0$ , in the sense that the Hausdorff distance between $U_m$ and $V_m$ tends to $0$ as $m \to \infty $ .
3.1 The sets $V_m$
We begin by noting that it follows from the definition of $\varphi $ and the fact that $\alpha _{m+1}/\alpha _m \leq 1/6$ , for $m \geq 0$ , that, for each $n \geq 0$ ,
so, for $0 \leq k \leq n$ ,
and
This gives the following properties of $V_m$ , stated in Theorem 3.1:
where $(\ell _n)$ is defined by $\ell _0 = 1 \mbox { and } \ell _{n+1} = \ell _{n} + n+3,$ for $n\ge 0$ .
In words, if $V_m \subset D_0$ , then $\varphi $ repeatedly translates $V_m$ to the right by 9 until the translated image lands on $\Delta _{n}$ , for some $n \in {\mathbb N}$ , at which point $\varphi $ maps the disc $\Delta _{n}$ onto $G_n$ and then maps $G_n$ into $D_0$ (see Figure 1).
3.2 Construction of the circles $\gamma _n$ and $\Gamma _n$
We now give an inductive definition of the values $r_m$ and $R_m$ described in Theorem 3.1(i) and define $\alpha _n$ inductively at the same time. We will choose these values in such a way that, if we define
then, for $m \geq 0$ ,
and
Further, we choose these values in such a way that we are able to use Lemma 2.2 and Lemma 2.4 to approximate the map $\varphi $ by an entire function f such that $\varphi $ can be replaced by f in (3.3) and (3.4). This in turn allows us to apply Theorem 2.1 to deduce that f has wandering domains with the required properties.
Our construction uses the Blaschke products $b_n$ which, for $n \geq 0$ , we write as
where $p_{n,j} \in \mathbb {D}=\{z:|z|<1\}$ are not necessarily different from each other, and $\theta _n \in [0, 2\pi )$ . We also use the maps defined by
noting that $B_n$ has degree $d_n$ and maps $G_n$ to $D_0={\mathbb D}$ .
First take
and recall that $\alpha _0 = 1$ . We then choose $r_1$ such that
and
so
and choose $R_1$ such that
Now assume that, for some $n \geq 0$ , $\alpha _{k}$ has been chosen for $0 \leq k \leq n$ , and $r_m$ and $R_m$ have been chosen for $0\leq m\leq \ell _{n}$ . (Note that $\ell _0 = 1$ and we have already specified $\alpha _0$ , $r_0$ , $R_0$ , $r_1$ and $R_1$ .) We shall give a rule for choosing $\alpha _{n+1}$ and also for choosing $r_m$ and $R_m$ for $\ell _{n} + 1 \leq m \leq \ell _{n+1}$ . There are three different cases, depending on the value of m.
Case 1. First we consider the case when $m = \ell _{n} + 1$ (and so $V_m \subset D_0$ ). We also specify $\alpha _{n+1}$ as part of this case.
We begin by choosing $c_{n+1}$ , $C_{n+1}$ to be circles centred at 0, lying in the interior and exterior of $D_0$ respectively, such that
and
We set
and note, using the fact that $\varphi (z)=\alpha _{n+1}B_n(z)+4\alpha _{n+1}$ , for $z \in G^{\prime }_n$ , that $V_{\ell _n+1}=\varphi (V_{\ell _n})=D(4\alpha _{n+1},\alpha _{n+1})$ , so $\rho _{\ell _n+1} = \alpha _{n+1}$ . We then set
and
Note that, together with (3.9), (3.11) and (3.10), these definitions imply that
and hence
Case 2. We now consider the cases when $m = \ell _{n} + k + 1$ , for $1 \leq k \leq n+1$ . Then
and
In all these cases, we simply choose $r_m$ and $R_m$ to satisfy
and
Case 3. Finally, we consider the case when $m = \ell _{n+1} = \ell _n + n+3$ , so $V_m = G_{n+1}$ . In this case, we choose $r_{\ell _{n+1}}$ and $R_{\ell _{n+1}}$ so that
This inductive process defines the values $r_m$ and $R_m$ , and hence the circles $\gamma _m$ and $\Gamma _m$ , for $m \geq 0$ . Note that it follows from (3.10), (3.11), (3.18), (3.13) and (3.21) that
Moreover, it follows from the definition of $\varphi $ together with (3.5) and (3.2) that we have
So (3.20) implies that, for $n \geq 0$ ,
We also note that it follows from (3.15), (3.18) and (3.2) that, for ${m = \ell _{n}+k + 1}$ , where $0 \leq k \leq n+1$ , we have $R_m - \rho _m \le R_{\ell _n+1}- \rho _{\ell _n+1} < \alpha _{n+1} = \rho _m$ . So, for ${m = \ell _{n}+k + 1}$ , where $0 \leq k \leq n$ , we have
and
by the definitions of $D(\zeta _m,\rho _m)$ and $\Delta _{n}'$ in the statement of Theorem 3.1.
It then follows from (3.16), and the fact that $\alpha_n<1/2\ {\rm for}\ n>0$ , that
Also, $\varphi $ is analytic in $V^{\prime }_{\ell _{n+1}}$ by (3.22) together with the last condition in (3.21).
It follows from (3.14) that, for $n \geq 0$ ,
and from (3.15) that, for $n \geq 0$ ,
Thus (3.3) and (3.4) hold when $m = \ell _n$ , where $n \geq 0$ .
Also, if $m = \ell _n+k+1$ , where $n \geq 0$ , $0 \leq k \leq n+1$ , then $\varphi $ is a translation on $\gamma _m$ and $\Gamma _m$ , by (3.24) and the definition of $\varphi $ . Since, by (3.17), we have
and, by (3.18),
it follows that (3.3) and (3.4) hold for these values of m too.
Finally, it follows from (3.25) that, on $\gamma _{\ell _{n+1}-1}$ and $\Gamma _{\ell _{n+1}-1}$ , $n\ge 0$ , the function $\varphi $ is a scaling by a factor of $1/\alpha _{n+1}> 1$ followed by a translation, and so it follows from (3.19) and (3.21) that (3.3) and (3.4) hold in this case too.
We note that the sets $\overline {V_m'}$ are disjoint since, if $V^{\prime }_{\ell _n+k+1}, V^{\prime }_{\ell _{n+1}+k+1} \subset D_k$ , for some $n \geq 0$ , $0\le k\leq n$ , then $V^{\prime }_{\ell _n+k+1} \subset D(9k + 4\alpha _{n+1}, 2\alpha _{n+1})$ and $V^{\prime }_{\ell _{n+1}+k+1} \subset D(9k + 4\alpha _{n+2}, 2\alpha _{n+2})$ , and
since
3.3 Construction of the function f
Our aim now is to use Lemma 2.2 and Lemma 2.4 to approximate the map $\varphi $ by a single entire function f such that, for $m \geq 0$ , $\gamma _{m+1}$ surrounds $f(\gamma _m)$ and $f(\Gamma _m)$ surrounds $\Gamma _{m+1}$ . We also require f to map certain curves $L_n$ near $\overline {G_n}$ in such a way that we can apply Theorem 2.1.
We define $L_n$ , for $n\geq 0$ , to be the circular arc
where $\delta _m= R_m-r_m \to 0$ as $m \to \infty $ ; see Figure 2.
We also define approximation error quantities $\varepsilon _m$ , for $m \geq 0$ , by
We now show that these errors have the upper bounds stated in part (ii) of our theorem. First, it follows from (3.6), (3.7) and (3.8) that
Next we note that it follows from (3.16) that, for $n \geq 0$ ,
It then follows from (3.17), (3.18), (3.19) and (3.21) that, for $0\leq k \leq n+1, \; n\geq 0$ ,
Thus
as required for part (ii).
Since $\varphi $ is analytic in each set $\overline {V^{\prime }_{\ell _{n+1}}}$ , for $n \geq 0$ , it follows from Lemma 2.2 that there exists an entire function f such that, for $n \geq 0$ ,
and such that
It follows from (3.33), (3.36) and (3.37) that for each $k \geq 0$ we can apply Lemma 2.4 in the disc $D_k = D(9k, \alpha _k)$ , with $g(z)= f(z)-\varphi (z)$ , $R=\alpha _k$ and associated constant $\epsilon = \varepsilon _{\ell _k + k+1}/\alpha _{k}$ . Note that the conditions of Lemma 2.4 are satisfied since it follows from (3.32) that
So, by Lemma 2.4, for all $z \in D_k$ , $k \geq 0$ , we have
We will now show that this implies that, for each $m \geq 0$ ,
First we note that (3.40) follows from (3.25) and (3.26) together with (3.34) and (3.35) when $m = \ell _n$ or $m = \ell _n-1$ , for some $n \geq 0$ . Other values of m are of the form $m = \ell _n + k + 1$ , for some $n \geq 0$ , $0 \leq k \leq n$ , and it follows from (3.24) that, in this case,
Therefore, by (3.39), (3.32) and using the fact that $\alpha _{k+1} \leq \alpha _{k}/6$ , we have, for $z \in V_{\ell _n + k+1}$ , $n \geq 0$ and $0 \leq k \leq n$ ,
Thus (3.40) holds for all $m \geq 0$ .
It now follows from (3.3), (3.4), (3.30) and (3.40) that, for $m \geq 0$ ,
We now apply Theorem 2.1 to the Jordan curves $\gamma _m, \Gamma _m$ , $m\geq 0$ , the compact curves $L_n$ , $n \geq 0$ , and the bounded domain $D = D(-4, 1)$ , noting that these sets satisfy the required hypotheses by construction and by (3.41), (3.42), (3.29) and (3.38). Part (i) of Theorem 3.1 now follows from Theorem 2.1, part (ii) follows from (3.40) together with the upper bounds for the errors that we obtained earlier, and part (iii) follows from (3.36) and (3.37).
Next we outline the proof of part (iv). The fact that $f:U_{\ell _{n+1}} \to U_{\ell _{n+1}+1}$ has degree $d_{n+1}$ follows from the final statement of Theorem 2.1, since (3.23), (3.30) and (3.35) together imply that $f(\gamma _{\ell _{n+1}})$ and $f(\Gamma _{\ell _{n+1}})$ both wind exactly $d_{n+1}$ times round the disc $D(\zeta _{\ell _{n+1}+1}, \rho _{\ell _{n+1}+1}/2)$ ; for the details of this argument see the proof of [Reference Benini, Evdoridou, Fagella, Rippon and StallardBEF+21, Theorem 5.3]. Since $\varphi $ is univalent in all other cases, the same argument applies to show that $f:U_m \to U_{m+1}$ is univalent in all other cases.
To complete the proof of Theorem 3.1, we note that the double inequality that compares the hyperbolic distances in $U_{\ell _n}$ between points of two orbits under f with the corresponding hyperbolic distances in the discs $G_n$ follows by applying Lemma 2.5 with
and noting that $f^{\ell _{n+1} - \ell _n}(\overline {D(\kappa _n,r_{\ell _n})} \subset D(\kappa _{n+1},r_{\ell _{n+1}})$ ; we omit the details, which are similar to those given in the proof of the final statement of [Reference Benini, Evdoridou, Fagella, Rippon and StallardBEF+21, Theorem 5.3].
4 Preliminary results for Theorem 1.1
In this section we prove some results which we use in order to construct our examples. In particular, we obtain estimates on the orbits of points in a wandering domain U of a transcendental entire function f obtained by applying Theorem 3.1 with specific Blaschke products $b_n$ . Our first result is used repeatedly in our constructions and gives estimates of the distances between orbits under the function f and under the model function $\varphi $ .
Lemma 4.1. Let f be a transcendental entire function with a wandering domain U arising from applying Theorem 3.1 with the Blaschke products $b_n$ . Then, using the notation of Theorem 3.1,
-
(a) if $z,z' \in U_{\ell _n}$ , for some $n \geq 0$ , we have
$$ \begin{align*} |f^{n+3}(z) - \varphi^{n+3}(z')| \leq \alpha_{n+1} + |b_n(z - \kappa_n) - b_n(z'-\kappa_n)|; \end{align*} $$ -
(b) and hence, if $z, z' \in \overline {D(\zeta _0,r_0)}\subset U_0$ , we have
$$ \begin{align*} |f^{\ell_{n+1}}(z) - \varphi^{\ell_{n+1}}(z')| \leq \alpha_{n+1} + |b_n(f^{\ell_n}(z) - \kappa_n) - b_n(\varphi^{\ell_{n}}(z')-\kappa_n)|. \end{align*} $$
Proof. To prove part (a), we begin by considering the case that $z=z'$ . We first use induction to show that, if $z \in U_{\ell _n}$ , for some $n \geq 0$ , then
We note that, for $m=1$ , this holds by Theorem 3.1(ii). Now assume that (4.1) holds for some m, $1 \leq m < n+2$ . We have
Since $z \in U_{\ell _n}$ , we have $f^{m}(z) \in U_{\ell _n+m} \subset D(\zeta _{\ell _n+m},R_{\ell _n+m})$ and $\varphi ^m(z) \in D(\zeta _{\ell _n+m}, R_{\ell _n+m})$ . Also, $\varphi $ is a translation on $D(\zeta _{\ell _n+m},R_{\ell _n+m})$ and so, together with Theorem 3.1(ii), we can deduce from (4.2) that
Thus (4.1) holds as claimed.
Next, we note that for $z\in U_{\ell _n}$ we have $f^{n+2}(z), \varphi ^{n+2}(z) \in \Delta ^{\prime }_n$ , on which $\varphi $ is a scaling by a factor of $1/\alpha _{n+1}$ followed by a translation and so, by (4.1) and Theorem 3.1(ii),
This shows that
which is the result of part (a) in the case that $z=z'$ .
We now use this fact to prove part (a) in general. If $z,z' \in U_{\ell _n}$ , for some $n \geq 0$ , then it follows from (4.3) and the definition of $\varphi $ that
This completes the proof of part (a).
Now we suppose that $z, z' \in \overline {D(\zeta _0,r_0)}$ . It follows from Theorem 3.1(i) that $z \in U_0$ and hence $f^{\ell _n}(z) \in U_{\ell _n}$ , for $n \geq 0$ . It also follows from (3.3) in the proof of Theorem 3.1 that $\varphi ^{\ell _n}(z') \in D(\zeta _{\ell _n},r_{\ell _n})$ and hence, by Theorem 3.1(i), that $\varphi ^{\ell _n}(z') \in U_{\ell _n}$ , for $n \geq 0$ . So part (b) follows from part (a) by replacing z and $z'$ by $f^{\ell _n}(z)$ and $\varphi ^{\ell _n}(z')$ , respectively.
Our next result gives a precise estimate for a Blaschke product that is used in one of our examples. We use this result in the proof of Lemma 4.3(a).
Lemma 4.2. Let $b(z) =(({z+1/3})/({1+z/3}))^2$ and suppose that $0<r<1$ . Then $0<r<b(r)<1$ and
Proof. Our proof is based on a useful relationship between the cross-ratio of four points $a<b<c<d$ on ${\mathbb R}$ , defined as
and the Schwarzian derivative of a real function f, defined as
It is well known that if f is monotonic on an interval I and $Sf<0$ on I, then
See, for example, de Melo and van Strien [Reference de Melo and van StriendMvS89, §1] for a good account of the relationship between functions with negative Schwarzian and the cross-ratio, including a proof of the above fact. Other key properties (also mentioned in [Reference de Melo and van StriendMvS89]) are that Möbius maps have zero Schwarzian and the composition rule for Schwarzians is
Since the Schwarzian derivative of a Möbius map is zero on its domain in ${\mathbb R}$ , it follows immediately from this composition rule that the function b has negative Schwarzian on the interval $(-3,\infty )$ .
It is straightforward to check that $1$ is a fixed point of the function b and that $r< b(r)<1$ , for $r \in (0,1)$ . Note also that b is increasing on $(-1/3, \infty )$ and convex on $(-3,1)$ . We first prove (4.4) in the case when $r<x<b(r)$ , by considering the four points $r,x,b(r),1$ . Since b is increasing on $(-1/3,\infty )$ and has negative Schwarzian there, we deduce that
Since b is convex on $(0,1)$ we deduce that
We deduce from the previous two inequalities that
and hence (by taking reciprocals and adding 1 to both sides) that
This proves (4.4) in the case when $r<x<b(r)$ .
For the case when $0<x<r$ , similar reasoning can be used with the points $x,r, b(r), 1$ , to deduce that
This completes the proof of Lemma 4.2.
The following lemma describes dynamical properties of the transcendental entire functions arising from Theorem 3.1 when using specific Blaschke products of a certain form. Two of our examples will be constructed using these Blaschke products. The proof of this result takes several pages.
Lemma 4.3. Let b be a Blaschke product of degree $2$ , and let f be an entire function arising by applying Theorem 3.1 with $b_n = b$ , for $n \geq 0$ .
-
(a) If $b(z)=(({z+1/3})/({1+z/3}))^2$ then there exist $x, y \in U_0\cap {\mathbb R}$ , $N\in {\mathbb N}$ and $c>0$ , with $f^n(x)\ne f^n(y)$ for $n\ge 0$ , such that
$$ \begin{align*} f^{\ell_{N}}(x)=\kappa_N \quad\text{and}\quad\kappa_{n}+1-f^{\ell_{n}}(x)\sim \frac{c}{n^{1/2}}\quad\text{as }n\to\infty,\end{align*} $$and$$ \begin{align*} f^{\ell_{N}}(y) = \kappa_N + 1/9 \quad\text{and}\quad\kappa_{n}+1-f^{\ell_{n}}(y) \sim \frac{c}{(n+1)^{1/2}}\quad\text{as }n\to\infty, \end{align*} $$and moreover,$$ \begin{align*}f^{\ell_n}(y)-f^{\ell_n}(x)= \frac{O(1)}{n^{3/2}} \quad\text{as }n \to \infty. \end{align*} $$ -
(b) If $b(z)=(({z+1/2})/({1+z/2}))^2$ then there exist $x, y \in U_0\cap {\mathbb R}$ and $N\in {\mathbb N}$ , with $f^n(x)\ne f^n(y)$ for $n\ge 0$ , such that
$$ \begin{align*} f^{\ell_{N}}(x)= \kappa_n \quad\text{and}\quad\kappa_{n}+1-f^{\ell_{n}}(x) = c \lambda^n(1+\eta_n)\quad\text{for }n\ge N, \end{align*} $$and$$ \begin{align*} f^{\ell_{N}}(y)= \kappa_n + 1/4 \quad\text{and}\quad\kappa_{n}+1-f^{\ell_{n}}(y) = c \lambda^{n+1}(1+\xi_n)\quad\text{for } n \ge N, \end{align*} $$where $c>0$ , $\lambda =2/3$ and $\max \{|\eta _n|,|\xi _n|\}\le 1/10$ , for $n \ge N$ .
Proof. First we observe that in both parts it is sufficient to prove the stated results about the behaviours of $f^{\ell _n-\ell _N}(x_N)$ and $f^{\ell _n-\ell _N}(y_N)$ when $x_N,y_N\in U_{\ell _N}$ for some particular positive integer N.
(a) Recall that, by the analysis of the behaviour in ${\mathbb D}$ of the iterates of b near its parabolic fixed point 1 (see [Reference Benini, Evdoridou, Fagella, Rippon and StallardBEF+21, Lemma 6.2(c)], for example), there are positive constants c and d such that
and
Therefore, we can choose N so large that
and also such that
We then take $r_n=b^{n-N}(0)$ , for $n\ge N$ , and define
and
It follows from the definition of $\varphi $ that
We use Lemma 4.2 to show that the orbit of $x_N=\kappa _N$ under f closely follows that of $x_N$ under $\varphi $ . More precisely, we shall show that
Note that it follows from (4.10) that $x^{\prime }_n \in U_{\ell _n}\cap {\mathbb R}$ since $x^{\prime }_N=x_N\in U_{\ell _N}\cap {\mathbb R}$ and f is a real entire function.
We shall prove (4.11) by using induction to show that
Before proving (4.12), we show that it implies (4.11). Using (4.8) and (4.9), it follows that, for $n\ge N+1$ ,
since the sum in the penultimate expression is dominated by the geometric series $1+1/2+1/4+\cdots $ . Thus (4.11) holds.
To start the proof of (4.12), we have
by Theorem 3.1(iv), since $x_N\in U_{\ell _N}$ . Now we assume that (4.12) holds for some $n\ge N+1$ and deduce that it holds for $n+1$ . Note that, whenever (4.11) holds (and so whenever (4.12) holds), we have $x^{\prime }_n \in [\kappa _n,\kappa _n+1)$ , by the definition of $x_n$ .
By the definition of $\varphi $ , Lemma 4.1(a), Lemma 4.2 and Theorem 3.1(iv), we have
This proves (4.12), so (4.11) holds.
Next, we define
and
with the same value of N as used earlier. Then
and
Reasoning as above, we obtain
Combining (4.6) and (4.7) with (4.11) and (4.14), we obtain
and
which gives the required result by taking $x,y \in U_0$ such that $f^{\ell _N}(x) =x_N = \kappa _N$ and $f^{\ell _N}(y)=y_N = \kappa _N + b(0) = \kappa _N + 1/9$ . Note that $y_n \ne x_n$ for $n\ge N$ , by (4.11), (4.13) and (4.14), so we deduce that $f^n(x)\ne f^n(y)$ for $n\ge 0$ .
(b) The proof of part (b) is similar to that of part (a), and we outline the argument briefly.
As in part (a), we take $r_n=b^{n-N}(0)$ , for $n\ge N$ , for some sufficiently large $N\in {\mathbb N}$ to be specified later in the proof, and put
and
so once again
Now note that the function b has fixed point 1 with multiplier $\lambda =2/3$ . It follows that
so, for some constant $c>0$ ,
Also, since b is univalent in the disc $\{z:|z-1|<1\}$ (or by a direct calculation), we have
where C is a positive constant, and so
As in part (a), we show that the orbit of $x_N$ under f closely follows that of $x_N$ under $\varphi $ . To be precise, we claim that for N sufficiently large we have
Indeed, for $n\ge N$ , we have
by Lemma 4.1(a), Theorem 3.1(iv), (4.17) and (4.18), provided that N is sufficiently large. Since $x_N=x^{\prime }_N=\kappa _N$ , it follows easily by induction that, for $n\ge N+1$ , we have
and (4.19) easily follows by (4.17) and by taking N sufficiently large.
We obtain the first estimate in part (b) by taking $x \in U_0$ such that $f^{\ell _N}(x) =x_N = \kappa _N$ . The second estimate follows by a similar argument, but this time we use an orbit under f whose subsequence passing through $U_{\ell _n}$ , $n\ge N$ , closely follows the sequence $y^{\prime }_n := \kappa _n+ r_{n+1}$ , $n\ge N$ , by taking $y \in U_0$ such that $f^{\ell _N}(y)=y_N = \kappa _N + b(0) = \kappa _N + 1/4$ . The proof that $f^n(x)\ne f^n(y)$ for $n\ge 0$ uses (4.19) and is similar to that in part (a).
Finally in this section, we give several estimates for a Blaschke product used in another of our examples.
Lemma 4.4. For $n \geq 0$ , let $b_n (z)= \widetilde{\mu _n}(\mu _n (z)^2),$ where
and let
where $s_n \in (0,1)$ . Then, for $n\geq 0$ ,
and
Proof. For $x \in (0,1)$ and $n \geq 0$ , we have
Since
for $x,a \in [0,1],$ part (a) follows.
For part (b), we deduce from the expression for $b_n$ given in part (a) that, for $0\leq x<y<1$ and $n\geq 0$ ,
and the conclusion then easily follows from the facts that $0<\lambda _n<1$ , for $n \geq 0$ , and $0\leq x<y<1$ .
5 Proof of Theorem 1.1
In this section we construct six examples of bounded oscillating wandering domains, based on the two simply connected wandering domain classifications given in [Reference Benini, Evdoridou, Fagella, Rippon and StallardBEF+21]. First, in terms of hyperbolic distances between orbits of points, simply connected wandering domains are classified as follows [Reference Benini, Evdoridou, Fagella, Rippon and StallardBEF+21, Theorem A].
Theorem 5.1. (First classification theorem)
Let U be a simply connected wandering domain of a transcendental entire function f and let $U_n$ be the Fatou component containing $f^n(U)$ , for $n \in {\mathbb N}$ . Define the countable set of pairs
Then exactly one of the following statements holds.
-
(1) ${\operatorname {dist}}_{U_n}(f^n(z), f^n(z')){\underset {n\to \infty }{\longrightarrow }} c(z,z')= 0 $ for all $z,z'\in U$ , and we say that U is (hyperbolically) contracting.
-
(2) ${\operatorname {dist}}_{U_n}(f^n(z), f^n(z')){\underset {n\to \infty }{\longrightarrow }} c(z,z')>0$ and ${\operatorname {dist}}_{U_n}(f^n(z), f^n(z')) \neq c(z,z')$ for all $(z,z')\in (U \times U) \setminus E$ , $n \in {\mathbb N}$ , and we say that U is (hyperbolically) semi-contracting.
-
(3) There exists $N>0$ such that for all $n\geq N$ , ${\operatorname {dist}}_{U_n}(f^n(z), f^n(z')) = c(z,z')>0$ for all $(z,z') \in (U \times U) \setminus E$ , and we say that U is (hyperbolically) eventually isometric.
Next, in terms of convergence of orbits to the boundary there are again three types of simply connected wandering domains (see [Reference Benini, Evdoridou, Fagella, Rippon and StallardBEF+21, Theorem C]), though only the latter two types ((b) and (c)) are realizable for oscillating wandering domains as explained in the introduction.
Theorem 5.2. (Second classification theorem)
Let U be a simply connected wandering domain of a transcendental entire function f and let $U_n$ be the Fatou component containing $f^n(U)$ , for $n \in {\mathbb N}$ . Then exactly one of the following statements holds.
-
(a) $\liminf _{n\to \infty } \operatorname {dist}(f^{n}(z),\partial U_{n})>0$ for all $z\in U$ , that is, all orbits stay away from the boundary.
-
(b) There exists a subsequence $n_k\to \infty $ for which $\operatorname {dist}(f^{n_k}(z),\partial U_{n_k})\to 0$ for all $z\in U$ , while for a different subsequence $m_k\to \infty $ we have that
$$ \begin{align*}\liminf_{k \to \infty} \operatorname{dist}(f^{m_k}(z),\partial U_{m_k})>0 \quad\text{for }z\in U.\end{align*} $$ -
(c) $\operatorname {dist}(f^{n}(z),\partial U_{n})\to 0$ for all $z\in U$ , that is, all orbits converge to the boundary.
Each of the examples in this section is constructed by applying Theorem 3.1 with an appropriate choice of the Blaschke products $b_n$ . We make repeated use of the following two results.
Lemma 5.3. Let f be a transcendental entire function with an orbit of wandering domains $(U_n)$ arising from applying Theorem 3.1 with the Blaschke products $(b_n)_{n \geq 0}$ and suppose that there exist $s,t \in U_0$ , $N \in {\mathbb N}$ with
where the sequences $(\ell _n)$ , $(\kappa _n)$ and $(r_n)$ are as defined in Theorem 3.1.
-
(a) If ${\operatorname {dist}}_{G_n}(f^{\ell _n}(s), f^{\ell _n}(t)){\underset {n\to \infty }{\longrightarrow }} 0$ and $f^{\ell _n}(s) \neq f^{\ell _n}(t)$ , for $n \geq 0$ , then $U_0$ is contracting.
-
(b) If $\liminf _{n \to \infty } {\operatorname {dist}}_{G_n}(f^{\ell _n}(s), f^{\ell _n}(t))>0$ and $f:U_n \to U_{n+1}$ has degree greater than $1$ for infinitely many $n \in {\mathbb N}$ , then $U_0$ is semi-contracting.
Proof. (a) In this case it follows from the last part of Theorem 3.1 that
It now follows from Theorem 5.1 that the only possibility is for $U_0$ to be contracting.
(b) In this case it follows from the last part of Theorem 3.1 that
and so $U_0$ is not contracting. Since $f:U_n \to U_{n+1}$ has degree greater than 1 for infinitely many $n \in {\mathbb N}$ , we know that $U_0$ is not eventually isometric, and so it follows from Theorem 5.1 that $U_0$ is semi-contracting.
Lemma 5.4. Let f be a transcendental entire function with an orbit of wandering domains $(U_n)$ arising from applying Theorem 3.1 with the Blaschke products $(b_n)_{n \geq 0}$ and let $s \in U_0 $ with
where the sets $G_n$ and the sequence $(\ell _n)$ , $n \geq 0$ are as defined in Theorem 3.1.
-
(a) If $\liminf _{n \to \infty } \operatorname {dist}(f^{\ell _n}(s),\partial G_{n})>0$ , then orbits of points in $U_0$ behave as described in Theorem 5.2(b).
-
(b) If $\operatorname {dist}(f^{\ell _n}(s),\partial G_{n}) \to 0$ as $n \to \infty $ , then orbits of points in $U_0$ behave as described in Theorem 5.2(c).
Proof. We begin by noting that it follows from Theorem 3.1 that
Since we know from Theorem 3.1(i) that the wandering domains $U_m$ are approximated increasingly well by the sets $\varphi _m(\Delta _0)$ as $m \to \infty $ , it follows that ${\operatorname {diam}} U_m \to 0$ as $m \to \infty $ for $m \neq \ell _n$ , $n \geq 0$ . So, if $s \in U_0$ , then
(a) In this case it follows from (5.1) together with Theorem 3.1(i) that
Together with (5.2), this implies that orbits of points in $U_0$ behave as described in Theorem 5.2(b).
(b) In this case it follows from (5.1) together with Theorem 3.1(i) that
Together with (5.2), this implies that orbits of points in $U_0$ behave as described in Theorem 5.2(c).
In some of the examples we make use of the following estimate for the hyperbolic distance in the unit disc.
Observation 1. For two points $r,s \in (0,1)$ with $r<s$ we have that
and so
We now give the examples that together prove Theorem 1.1. Examples 1, 2 and 3, which follow, correspond to the three cases of Theorem 5.1. Within each example we give two functions, corresponding to the two realizable cases of Theorem 5.2.
Example 1. (Two contracting wandering domains)
For each of the cases (b) and (c) of Theorem 5.2, there exists a transcendental entire function f having a sequence of bounded, simply connected, oscillating contracting wandering domains $(U_n)$ with the stated behaviour.
Proof. First example. We construct an oscillating contracting wandering domain $U_0$ with the behaviour described in Theorem 5.2(b) by applying Theorem 3.1 with $b_n(z)=z^2$ , for $n \geq 0$ .
We begin by considering the orbits of points in the disc $D(4,1/12) \subset D(4,r_0)$ under iteration by $\varphi $ . We note that, if $z \in D(\kappa _n, R_{\ell _n})$ , for some $n \geq 0$ , then
So, if $z \in D(4,1/12)$ , then, for $n\ge 0$ , we have
Next we claim that, if $z \in D(4,1/12)$ , then
and
We prove (5.6) and (5.5) together using induction. First, we note that they are true when $n=0$ , since if $z\in D(4,1/12)$ , then $|f^{\ell _0}(z)-\varphi ^{\ell _0}(z)| = |f(z)-\varphi (z)|\le {\varepsilon }_0 \le 1/24$ , by Theorem 3.1(ii), and $|\varphi ^{\ell _0}(z)-\kappa _0|=|\varphi (z)-\kappa _0|\le 1/12$ by (5.4).
Next, we suppose that (5.5) and (5.6) hold for $n=m \ge 0$ . It follows from these two estimates and Lemma 4.1(b), together with (5.4), that if $z\in D(4,1/12)$ , then
which gives (5.5) with $n=m+1$ , and also
which gives (5.6) with $n=m+1$ .
Since $\alpha _n \leq 1/6^n$ for $n \geq 0$ , it follows from (5.5) that if $z \in D(4,1/12)$ , then
Together with (5.4), this implies that, if $z \in D(4,1/12)$ , then
We now use (5.7) together with Lemma 5.3 and Lemma 5.4 to show that the wandering domain ${U_0}$ has the required properties. First we take $s,t \in D(4,1/12)$ such that $f(s),f(t) \in D(\kappa _0, r_1)$ with $f^{\ell _n}(s) \neq f^{\ell _n}(t)$ , for $n \geq 0$ . Since $G_n = D(\kappa _n,1)$ , for $n \geq 0$ , it follows from (5.7) that
and hence, by Lemma 5.3(a), $U_0$ is contracting.
Also, it follows from (5.7) that
and hence, by Lemma 5.4(a), orbits of points in $U_0$ behave as described in Theorem 5.2(b).
Second example. We construct an oscillating contracting wandering domain $U_0$ with the behaviour described in Theorem 5.2(c) by applying Theorem 3.1 with $b_n(z)= (({z+1/3})/({1+z/3}))^2$ , for $n \geq 0$ . Let $x,y \in U_0$ be as in Lemma 4.3(a). Since $G_n = D(\kappa _n,1)$ , for $n \geq 0$ , it follows from Lemma 4.3(a) and the hyperbolic metric estimate (5.3) that
It now follows from Lemma 5.3(a) that $U_0$ is contracting. We also know from Lemma 4.3(a) that
and so it follows from Lemma 5.4(b) that orbits of points in $U_0$ behave as described in Theorem 5.2(c).
Example 2. (Two semi-contracting wandering domains)
For each of the cases (b) and (c) of Theorem 5.2, there exists a transcendental entire function f having a sequence of bounded, simply connected, oscillating semi-contracting wandering domains $(U_n)$ with the stated behaviour.
Proof. First example. We construct an oscillating semi-contracting wandering domain with the behaviour described in Theorem 5.2(b) by applying Theorem 3.1 with $b_n (z)= \widetilde {\mu _n}(\mu _n (z)^2)$ , for $n \geq 0$ , where
We shall use the estimates for $b_n$ obtained in Lemma 4.4, and once again put
We now choose $s_n \in (0,1)$ with $s_n \to 1$ as $n\to \infty $ so quickly that
We first consider the orbit of the point $4$ under iteration by f, noting that
It follows from (5.9), Lemma 4.1(b) and (4.20) in Lemma 4.4 that, for $n \geq 0$ ,
Together with Theorem 3.1(ii) and (5.9), this implies that, for $n \geq 0$ ,
Now we consider the orbit of $19/4$ under f. Once again, we begin by considering the orbit under $\varphi $ . We claim that
We prove (5.11) by induction, first noting that it holds for $n=0$ , since $\varphi ^{\ell _0}(19/4)=\varphi (19/4)=\kappa _0 + 3/4$ . Next, suppose that (5.11) holds for $n=m$ . Then, by (4.20),
Thus (5.11) holds for $n=m+1$ and hence, by induction, for all $n \geq 0$ . Together with (5.8), this implies that
Next we claim that, for $n \geq 0$ ,
We prove (5.13) by induction, noting that it holds for $n=0$ . Next, suppose that (5.13) holds for $n=m\ge 0$ . Then it follows from Lemma 4.1(b) and (4.21) that
Thus (5.13) holds for $n=m+1$ and hence, by induction, for all $n \geq 0$ . It now follows from Theorem 3.1(ii) and (5.8) that
It follows from (5.12), (5.14) and (5.10) that, for $n \geq 0$ ,
Since $G_n = D(\kappa _n,1)$ , for $n \geq 0$ , together with (5.10) this implies that
Also, it follows from Theorem 3.1(iv) that $f:U_{\ell _n} \to U_{\ell _{n+1}}$ has degree greater than 1, for $n\ge 0$ . So, by Lemma 5.3(b), $U_0$ is semi-contracting.
Finally, it follows from (5.10) that
and so, by Lemma 5.4(a), orbits of points in $U_0$ behave as described in Theorem 5.2(b).
Second example. We construct an oscillating semi-contracting wandering domain $U_0$ with the behaviour described in Theorem 5.2(c) by applying Theorem 3.1 with $b_n(z)=(({z+1/2})/({1+z/2}))^2$ , for $n \geq 0$ . Let $x,y \in U$ be as in Lemma 4.3(b). Since $G_n = D(\kappa _n,1)$ , for $n \geq 0$ , it follows from Lemma 4.3(b) and the hyperbolic metric estimate (5.3) that for n sufficiently large we have
recalling that $\lambda =2/3$ .
Also, it follows from Theorem 3.1 that $f: U_{\ell _n} \to U_{\ell _n+1}$ has degree greater than 1, for $n\ge 0$ , so $U_0$ is semi-contracting by Lemma 5.3(b). Finally, we know from Lemma 4.3(b) that
and so, by Lemma 5.4(b), orbits of points in $U_0$ behave as described in Theorem 5.2(c).
Example 3. (Two eventually isometric wandering domains)
For each of the cases (b) and (c) of Theorem 5.2, there exists a transcendental entire function f having a sequence of bounded, simply connected, oscillating eventually isometric wandering domains $(U_n)$ with the stated behaviour.
Proof. First example. We construct an oscillating eventually isometric wandering domain $U_0$ with the behaviour described in Theorem 5.2(b) by applying Theorem 3.1 with $b_n(z) = z$ , for $n \geq 0$ .
Since $b_n$ is univalent, for $n \geq 0$ , it follows from Theorem 3.1(iv) that $f:U_m \to U_{m+1}$ is also univalent, for $m \geq 0$ . Thus U is eventually isometric.
We now consider the orbit of $4$ under iteration by f. We claim that, for $n \geq 0$ ,
We prove (5.15) by induction, noting that it is true for $n=0$ . Next, suppose that (5.15) holds for $n=m\ge 0$ . Then it follows from Lemma 4.1(b) that
Thus (5.15) holds for $n=m+1$ and hence, by induction, for all $n \geq 0$ .
Since $\alpha _n \leq 1/6^n$ for $n \geq 0$ , and $|f(4) - \varphi (4)| \leq 1/24$ , by Theorem 3.1(ii), it follows from (5.15) that
Since $\varphi ^{\ell _{n}}(4) = \kappa _n$ and $G_n = D(\kappa _n,1)$ , for $n \geq 0$ , it follows from Lemma 5.4(a) that orbits of points in $U_0$ behave as described in Theorem 5.2(b).
Second example. We construct an oscillating eventually isometric wandering domain $U_0$ with the behaviour described in Theorem 5.2(c) by applying Theorem 3.1 with $b_n(z)= b(z) = ({z+5/6})/({1+5 z/6})$ , for $n \geq 0$ .
Since $b_n$ is univalent, for $n \geq 0$ , it follows from Theorem 3.1(iv) that $f:U_m \to U_{m+1}$ is also univalent, for $m \geq 0$ . Thus $U_0$ is eventually isometric.
We now consider the orbit of 4 under iteration by $\varphi $ , noting that
The Blaschke product b has an attracting fixed point at 1 and we have
and so
We also note that if $0 \le z_1, z_2 <1$ , then
Next, we take a point $x \in D(4,r_0)$ such that $f(x) = \kappa _0$ , which is possible by Theorem 3.1(i), and consider the orbit of x under iteration by f. We claim that, for $n \geq 0$ ,
We prove (5.19) by induction. First, we note that it is true if $n=0$ , since $f(x)-\varphi (4)\,{=}\,0$ . Next, suppose that (5.19) holds for $n=m\ge 0$ . Then it follows from (5.17) and (5.19) that $f^{\ell _{m}}(x)> 0$ , and so it follows from Lemma 4.1(b) together with (5.18) that, for $m \ge 0$ ,
Thus (5.19) holds for $n=m+1$ and hence, by induction, for all $n \geq 0$ .
It follows from (5.19) together with (5.17) that
and so, by Lemma 5.4(b), orbits of points in $U_0$ behave as described in Theorem 5.2(c).
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Anna Miriam Benini, Chris Bishop, Nuria Fagella and Lasse Rempe for inspiring discussions. All authors were supported by Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council grant EP/R010560/1.