15,005 research outputs found
Balanced partitions of 3-colored geometric sets in the plane
Let SS be a finite set of geometric objects partitioned into classes or colors . A subset S'¿SS'¿S is said to be balanced if S'S' contains the same amount of elements of SS from each of the colors. We study several problems on partitioning 33-colored sets of points and lines in the plane into two balanced subsets: (a) We prove that for every 3-colored arrangement of lines there exists a segment that intersects exactly one line of each color, and that when there are 2m2m lines of each color, there is a segment intercepting mm lines of each color. (b) Given nn red points, nn blue points and nn green points on any closed Jordan curve ¿¿, we show that for every integer kk with 0=k=n0=k=n there is a pair of disjoint intervals on ¿¿ whose union contains exactly kk points of each color. (c) Given a set SS of nn red points, nn blue points and nn green points in the integer lattice satisfying certain constraints, there exist two rays with common apex, one vertical and one horizontal, whose union splits the plane into two regions, each one containing a balanced subset of SS.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
A QPTAS for the Base of the Number of Triangulations of a Planar Point Set
The number of triangulations of a planar n point set is known to be ,
where the base lies between and The fastest known algorithm
for counting triangulations of a planar n point set runs in time.
The fastest known arbitrarily close approximation algorithm for the base of the
number of triangulations of a planar n point set runs in time subexponential in
We present the first quasi-polynomial approximation scheme for the base of
the number of triangulations of a planar point set
Balanced Islands in Two Colored Point Sets in the Plane
Let be a set of points in general position in the plane, of which
are red and of which are blue. In this paper we prove that there exist: for
every , a convex set containing
exactly red points and exactly
blue points of ; a convex set containing exactly red points and exactly blue points of . Furthermore, we present
polynomial time algorithms to find these convex sets. In the first case we
provide an time algorithm and an time algorithm in the
second case. Finally, if is
small, that is, not much larger than , we improve the running
time to
Boundary Partitions in Trees and Dimers
Given a finite planar graph, a grove is a spanning forest in which every
component tree contains one or more of a specified set of vertices (called
nodes) on the outer face. For the uniform measure on groves, we compute the
probabilities of the different possible node connections in a grove. These
probabilities only depend on boundary measurements of the graph and not on the
actual graph structure, i.e., the probabilities can be expressed as functions
of the pairwise electrical resistances between the nodes, or equivalently, as
functions of the Dirichlet-to-Neumann operator (or response matrix) on the
nodes. These formulae can be likened to generalizations (for spanning forests)
of Cardy's percolation crossing probabilities, and generalize Kirchhoff's
formula for the electrical resistance. Remarkably, when appropriately
normalized, the connection probabilities are in fact integer-coefficient
polynomials in the matrix entries, where the coefficients have a natural
algebraic interpretation and can be computed combinatorially. A similar
phenomenon holds in the so-called double-dimer model: connection probabilities
of boundary nodes are polynomial functions of certain boundary measurements,
and as formal polynomials, they are specializations of the grove polynomials.
Upon taking scaling limits, we show that the double-dimer connection
probabilities coincide with those of the contour lines in the Gaussian free
field with certain natural boundary conditions. These results have direct
application to connection probabilities for multiple-strand SLE_2, SLE_8, and
SLE_4.Comment: 46 pages, 12 figures. v4 has additional diagrams and other minor
change
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