466 research outputs found
Expansive Motions and the Polytope of Pointed Pseudo-Triangulations
We introduce the polytope of pointed pseudo-triangulations of a point set in
the plane, defined as the polytope of infinitesimal expansive motions of the
points subject to certain constraints on the increase of their distances. Its
1-skeleton is the graph whose vertices are the pointed pseudo-triangulations of
the point set and whose edges are flips of interior pseudo-triangulation edges.
For points in convex position we obtain a new realization of the
associahedron, i.e., a geometric representation of the set of triangulations of
an n-gon, or of the set of binary trees on n vertices, or of many other
combinatorial objects that are counted by the Catalan numbers. By considering
the 1-dimensional version of the polytope of constrained expansive motions we
obtain a second distinct realization of the associahedron as a perturbation of
the positive cell in a Coxeter arrangement.
Our methods produce as a by-product a new proof that every simple polygon or
polygonal arc in the plane has expansive motions, a key step in the proofs of
the Carpenter's Rule Theorem by Connelly, Demaine and Rote (2000) and by
Streinu (2000).Comment: 40 pages, 7 figures. Changes from v1: added some comments (specially
to the "Further remarks" in Section 5) + changed to final book format. This
version is to appear in "Discrete and Computational Geometry -- The
Goodman-Pollack Festschrift" (B. Aronov, S. Basu, J. Pach, M. Sharir, eds),
series "Algorithms and Combinatorics", Springer Verlag, Berli
Flip Graphs of Degree-Bounded (Pseudo-)Triangulations
We study flip graphs of triangulations whose maximum vertex degree is bounded
by a constant . In particular, we consider triangulations of sets of
points in convex position in the plane and prove that their flip graph is
connected if and only if ; the diameter of the flip graph is .
We also show that, for general point sets, flip graphs of pointed
pseudo-triangulations can be disconnected for , and flip graphs of
triangulations can be disconnected for any . Additionally, we consider a
relaxed version of the original problem. We allow the violation of the degree
bound by a small constant. Any two triangulations with maximum degree at
most of a convex point set are connected in the flip graph by a path of
length , where every intermediate triangulation has maximum degree
at most .Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, acknowledgments update
Liftings and stresses for planar periodic frameworks
We formulate and prove a periodic analog of Maxwell's theorem relating
stressed planar frameworks and their liftings to polyhedral surfaces with
spherical topology. We use our lifting theorem to prove deformation and
rigidity-theoretic properties for planar periodic pseudo-triangulations,
generalizing features known for their finite counterparts. These properties are
then applied to questions originating in mathematical crystallography and
materials science, concerning planar periodic auxetic structures and ultrarigid
periodic frameworks.Comment: An extended abstract of this paper has appeared in Proc. 30th annual
Symposium on Computational Geometry (SOCG'14), Kyoto, Japan, June 201
Abstracts for the twentyfirst European workshop on Computational geometry, Technische Universiteit Eindhoven, The Netherlands, March 9-11, 2005
This volume contains abstracts of the papers presented at the 21st European Workshop on Computational Geometry, held at TU Eindhoven (the Netherlands) on March 9–11, 2005. There were 53 papers presented at the Workshop, covering a wide range of topics. This record number shows that the field of computational geometry is very much alive in Europe. We wish to thank all the authors who submitted papers and presented their work at the workshop. We believe that this has lead to a collection of very interesting abstracts that are both enjoyable and informative for the reader. Finally, we are grateful to TU Eindhoven for their support in organizing the workshop and to the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) for sponsoring the workshop
Maximizing Maximal Angles for Plane Straight-Line Graphs
Let be a plane straight-line graph on a finite point set
in general position. The incident angles of a vertex
of are the angles between any two edges of that appear consecutively in
the circular order of the edges incident to .
A plane straight-line graph is called -open if each vertex has an
incident angle of size at least . In this paper we study the following
type of question: What is the maximum angle such that for any finite set
of points in general position we can find a graph from a certain
class of graphs on that is -open? In particular, we consider the
classes of triangulations, spanning trees, and paths on and give tight
bounds in most cases.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures. Apart of minor corrections, some proofs that
were omitted in the previous version are now include
Enumerating Constrained Non-Crossing Minimally Rigid Frameworks
In this paper we present an algorithm for enumerating without repetitions all the non-crossing generically minimally rigid bar-and-joint frameworks under edge constraints, which we call constrained non-crossing Laman frameworks, on a given set of n points in the plane. Our algorithm is based on the reverse search paradigm of Avis and Fukuda. It generates each output graph in O(n4) time and O(n) space, or, with a slightly different implementation, in O(n3) time and O(n2) space. In particular, we obtain that the set of all the constrained non-crossing Laman frameworks on a given point set is connected by flips which preserve the Laman property
Non-crossing frameworks with non-crossing reciprocals
We study non-crossing frameworks in the plane for which the classical
reciprocal on the dual graph is also non-crossing. We give a complete
description of the self-stresses on non-crossing frameworks whose reciprocals
are non-crossing, in terms of: the types of faces (only pseudo-triangles and
pseudo-quadrangles are allowed); the sign patterns in the self-stress; and a
geometric condition on the stress vectors at some of the vertices.
As in other recent papers where the interplay of non-crossingness and
rigidity of straight-line plane graphs is studied, pseudo-triangulations show
up as objects of special interest. For example, it is known that all planar
Laman circuits can be embedded as a pseudo-triangulation with one non-pointed
vertex. We show that if such an embedding is sufficiently generic, then the
reciprocal is non-crossing and again a pseudo-triangulation embedding of a
planar Laman circuit. For a singular (i.e., non-generic) pseudo-triangulation
embedding of a planar Laman circuit, the reciprocal is still non-crossing and a
pseudo-triangulation, but its underlying graph may not be a Laman circuit.
Moreover, all the pseudo-triangulations which admit a non-crossing reciprocal
arise as the reciprocals of such, possibly singular, stresses on
pseudo-triangulation embeddings of Laman circuits.
All self-stresses on a planar graph correspond to liftings to piece-wise
linear surfaces in 3-space. We prove characteristic geometric properties of the
lifts of such non-crossing reciprocal pairs.Comment: 32 pages, 23 figure
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