My question refers to the following article (to page 26: proof of Theorem 4.1):
- Koji Fujiwara, Zlil Sela, The rates of growth in a hyperbolic group, Invent. math. 233 (2023) pp 1427–1470, doi:10.1007/s00222-023-01200-w, arXiv:2002.10278.
In the article we find the statement that for a non-abelian limit group $L$ we always find a sequence of epimorphisms to $F_2$ that converges to $L$. But by definition of a (non-abelian) limit group we find -a priori- only a sequence of homomorphisms. Why can the homomorphisms (in this situation) always be chosen to be surjective?
From the article An Introduction to Limit Groups by Wilton (pdf) I could find out that limit groups are fully residually free and because $L$ is not abelian it has to contain a free group of rank at least 2. Maybe this helps somehow to prove the statement.