Glasner sets and uniform dilations

In [1], S. Glasner proved the following result: Let A be an infinite subset of \mathbb T=\mathbb R/\mathbb Z. Then for every \epsilon>0, there exists an integer n such that nA:=\{na: a \in A\} intersects every interval of length \epsilon in \mathbb T (in this case, nA is said to be \epsilon-dense in \mathbb T).
In [2], a set of integers S was defined to be a Glasner set if for every infinite A \subset \mathbb T and \epsilon>0, there exists n \in S such that nA is \epsilon-dense in \mathbb T. It was shown in [2] that if P is a nonconstant polynomial with integer coefficients, then \{P(n): n \in \mathbb Z\} is a Glasner set, yet a finite union of lacunary sequences is never a Glasner set. In [3] it was proved that the primes form a Glasner set, and this was extended in [4] to polynomial images of the primes.

Question 1: Are there two sets of integers neither of which is a Glasner set, but whose union does form a Glasner set?

A quantitative version of Glasner's result was established in [2], [3]: Given \epsilon>0, there exists an integer k  such that, for any set A \subset \mathbb T of cardinality at least k, there is an integer n such that nA is \epsilon-dense in \mathbb T. If the minimal such k is denoted by k(\epsilon), then for some absolute constant c,

    \[ \frac{c}{\epsilon^2} \leq  k(\epsilon)  \leq \epsilon^{-2+o(1)} \]

as \epsilon \to 0. The lower bound is obtained by taking A=A(\epsilon)   consisting of all reduced fraction j/\ell where 1 \le j \le \ell < \epsilon^{-1}.
The upper bound is harder to prove; but could the lower bound be sharp?

Question 2: Is k(\epsilon) =O(\epsilon^{-2}) ?

[1] Glasner, Shmuel.
Almost periodic sets and measures on the torus.
Israel J. Math. 32 (1979), no. 2-3, 161–-172.

[2] Berend, Daniel and Peres, Yuval.
Asymptotically dense dilations of sets on the circle.
J. London Math. Soc. (2) 47 (1993), no. 1, 1–-17.

[3] N. Alon and Y. Peres, "Uniform dilations'', Geometric and Functional Analysis, vol. 2, No. 1 (1992), 1–28.

[4] Nair, R. and Velani, S. L.
Glasner sets and polynomials in primes.
Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 126 (1998), no. 10, 2835–-2840.

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