Extremality and dynamically defined measures, part I: Diophantine properties of quasi-decaying measures
Tushar Das, Lior Fishman, David Simmons, and Mariusz Urba\'nski

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new approach to proving the extremality of dynamically defined measures, significantly broadening the class of measures known to be extremal and resolving longstanding conjectures in Diophantine approximation.
Contribution
It develops the concepts of quasi-decaying and weakly quasi-decaying measures, proving that weak quasi-decay implies strong extremality, and extends extremality results to various new classes of measures.
Findings
Weak quasi-decay implies strong extremality in matrix approximation.
Proved the inherited exponent of irrationality for measures on subspaces.
Established extremality of hyperbolic measures and Patterson–Sullivan measures for geometrically finite groups.
Abstract
We present a new method of proving the Diophantine extremality of various dynamically defined measures, vastly expanding the class of measures known to be extremal. This generalizes and improves the celebrated theorem of Kleinbock and Margulis ('98) resolving Sprind\v{z}uk's conjecture, as well as its extension by Kleinbock, Lindenstrauss, and Weiss ('04), hereafter abbreviated KLW. As applications we prove the extremality of all hyperbolic measures of smooth dynamical systems with sufficiently large Hausdorff dimension, and of the Patterson--Sullivan measures of all nonplanar geometrically finite groups. The key technical idea, which has led to a plethora of new applications, is a significant weakening of KLW's sufficient conditions for extremality. In Part I, we introduce and develop a systematic account of two classes of measures, which we call - and …
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