Take a spherical harmonic $y_d$ of degree $d$ on the sphere $\mathbb{S}^2$ and a spherical disk of radius $\frac{1}{d^2}$ centered at any point (let's say the north pole).
Is there an upper bound, independent of d, to the number of critical points of $y_d$ contained in the spherical disk?
(We may allow $d$ to grow arbitrarily big). This article shows that there always exists a spherical harmonic of degree $d$ with the maximum allowed number of critical points, but the construction it employs cannot put a large number of critical points close together. I was thinking that maybe the geometry can stabilize on a local scale when $d$ gets big.