6,591 research outputs found
Approximating the edge length of 2-edge connected planar geometric graphs on a set of points
Given a set P of n points in the plane, we solve the problems of constructing a geometric planar graph spanning P 1) of minimum degree 2, and 2) which is 2-edge connected, respectively, and has max edge length bounded by a factor of 2 times the optimal; we also show that the factor 2 is best possible given appropriate connectivity conditions on the set P, respectively. First, we construct in O(nlogn) time a geometric planar graph of minimum degree 2 and max edge length bounded by 2 times the optimal. This is then used to construct in O(nlogn) time a 2-edge connected geometric planar graph spanning P with max edge length bounded by √5 times the optimal, assuming that the set P forms a connected Unit Disk Graph. Second, we prove that 2 times the optimal is always sufficient if the set of points forms a 2 edge connected Unit Disk Graph and give an algorithm that runs in O(n 2) time. We also show that for κ ∈ O(√n), there exists a set P of n points in the plane such that even though the Unit Disk Graph spanning P is κ-vertex connected, there is no 2-edge connected geometric planar graph spanning P even if the length of its edges is allowed to be up to 17/16
Constant-Factor Approximation for TSP with Disks
We revisit the traveling salesman problem with neighborhoods (TSPN) and
present the first constant-ratio approximation for disks in the plane: Given a
set of disks in the plane, a TSP tour whose length is at most times
the optimal can be computed in time that is polynomial in . Our result is
the first constant-ratio approximation for a class of planar convex bodies of
arbitrary size and arbitrary intersections. In order to achieve a
-approximation, we reduce the traveling salesman problem with disks, up
to constant factors, to a minimum weight hitting set problem in a geometric
hypergraph. The connection between TSPN and hitting sets in geometric
hypergraphs, established here, is likely to have future applications.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure
Total Curvature of Graphs after Milnor and Euler
We define a new notion of total curvature, called net total curvature, for
finite graphs embedded in Rn, and investigate its properties. Two guiding
principles are given by Milnor's way of measuring the local crookedness of a
Jordan curve via a Crofton-type formula, and by considering the double cover of
a given graph as an Eulerian circuit. The strength of combining these ideas in
defining the curvature functional is (1) it allows us to interpret the
singular/non-eulidean behavior at the vertices of the graph as a superposition
of vertices of a 1-dimensional manifold, and thus (2) one can compute the total
curvature for a wide range of graphs by contrasting local and global properties
of the graph utilizing the integral geometric representation of the curvature.
A collection of results on upper/lower bounds of the total curvature on
isotopy/homeomorphism classes of embeddings is presented, which in turn
demonstrates the effectiveness of net total curvature as a new functional
measuring complexity of spatial graphs in differential-geometric terms.Comment: Most of the results contained in "Total curvature and isotopy of
graphs in ."(arXiv:0806.0406) have been incorporated into the current
articl
The Traveling Salesman Problem Under Squared Euclidean Distances
Let be a set of points in , and let be a
real number. We define the distance between two points as
, where denotes the standard Euclidean distance between
and . We denote the traveling salesman problem under this distance
function by TSP(). We design a 5-approximation algorithm for TSP(2,2)
and generalize this result to obtain an approximation factor of
for and all .
We also study the variant Rev-TSP of the problem where the traveling salesman
is allowed to revisit points. We present a polynomial-time approximation scheme
for Rev-TSP with , and we show that Rev-TSP is APX-hard if and . The APX-hardness proof carries
over to TSP for the same parameter ranges.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures. (v2) Minor linguistic change
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