48,721 research outputs found
On Geometric Drawings of Graphs
This thesis is about geometric drawings of graphs and their topological generalizations.
First, we study pseudolinear drawings of graphs in the plane. A pseudolinear drawing is one in which every edge can be extended into an infinite simple arc in the plane, homeomorphic to , and such that every two extending arcs cross exactly once. This is a natural generalization of the well-studied class of rectilinear drawings, where edges are straight-line segments. Although, the problem of deciding whether a drawing is homeomorphic to a rectilinear drawing is NP-hard, in this work we characterize the minimal forbidden subdrawings for pseudolinear drawings and we also provide a polynomial-time algorithm for recognizing this family of drawings.
Second, we consider the problem of transforming a topological drawing into a similar rectilinear drawing preserving the set of crossing pairs of edges. We show that, under some circumstances, pseudolinearity is a necessary and sufficient condition for the existence of such transformation. For this, we prove a generalization of Tutte's Spring Theorem for drawings with crossings placed
in a particular way.
Lastly, we study drawings of in the sphere whose edges can be extended to an arrangement of pseudocircles. An arrangement of pseudocircles is a set of simple closed curves in the sphere such that every two intersect at most twice. We show that (i) there is drawing of that cannot be extended into an arrangement of pseudocircles; and (ii) there is a drawing of that can be extended to an arrangement of pseudocircles, but no extension satisfies that every two pseudocircles intersects exactly twice. We also introduce the notion pseudospherical drawings of , a generalization of spherical drawings in which each edge is a minor arc of a great circle. We show that these drawings are characterized by a simple local property. We also show that every pseudospherical drawing has an extension into an arrangement of pseudocircles where the ``at most twice'' condition is replaced by ``exactly twice''
Planar Drawings of Fixed-Mobile Bigraphs
A fixed-mobile bigraph G is a bipartite graph such that the vertices of one
partition set are given with fixed positions in the plane and the mobile
vertices of the other part, together with the edges, must be added to the
drawing. We assume that G is planar and study the problem of finding, for a
given k >= 0, a planar poly-line drawing of G with at most k bends per edge. In
the most general case, we show NP-hardness. For k=0 and under additional
constraints on the positions of the fixed or mobile vertices, we either prove
that the problem is polynomial-time solvable or prove that it belongs to NP.
Finally, we present a polynomial-time testing algorithm for a certain type of
"layered" 1-bend drawings
-Stars or On Extending a Drawing of a Connected Subgraph
We consider the problem of extending the drawing of a subgraph of a given
plane graph to a drawing of the entire graph using straight-line and polyline
edges. We define the notion of star complexity of a polygon and show that a
drawing of an induced connected subgraph can be extended with at
most bends per edge, where is the
largest star complexity of a face of and is the size of the
largest face of . This result significantly improves the previously known
upper bound of [5] for the case where is connected. We also show
that our bound is worst case optimal up to a small additive constant.
Additionally, we provide an indication of complexity of the problem of testing
whether a star-shaped inner face can be extended to a straight-line drawing of
the graph; this is in contrast to the fact that the same problem is solvable in
linear time for the case of star-shaped outer face [9] and convex inner face
[13].Comment: Appears in the Proceedings of the 26th International Symposium on
Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2018
Rectangular Layouts and Contact Graphs
Contact graphs of isothetic rectangles unify many concepts from applications
including VLSI and architectural design, computational geometry, and GIS.
Minimizing the area of their corresponding {\em rectangular layouts} is a key
problem. We study the area-optimization problem and show that it is NP-hard to
find a minimum-area rectangular layout of a given contact graph. We present
O(n)-time algorithms that construct -area rectangular layouts for
general contact graphs and -area rectangular layouts for trees.
(For trees, this is an -approximation algorithm.) We also present an
infinite family of graphs (rsp., trees) that require (rsp.,
) area.
We derive these results by presenting a new characterization of graphs that
admit rectangular layouts using the related concept of {\em rectangular duals}.
A corollary to our results relates the class of graphs that admit rectangular
layouts to {\em rectangle of influence drawings}.Comment: 28 pages, 13 figures, 55 references, 1 appendi
Planar Octilinear Drawings with One Bend Per Edge
In octilinear drawings of planar graphs, every edge is drawn as an
alternating sequence of horizontal, vertical and diagonal ()
line-segments. In this paper, we study octilinear drawings of low edge
complexity, i.e., with few bends per edge. A -planar graph is a planar graph
in which each vertex has degree less or equal to . In particular, we prove
that every 4-planar graph admits a planar octilinear drawing with at most one
bend per edge on an integer grid of size . For 5-planar
graphs, we prove that one bend per edge still suffices in order to construct
planar octilinear drawings, but in super-polynomial area. However, for 6-planar
graphs we give a class of graphs whose planar octilinear drawings require at
least two bends per edge
L-Visibility Drawings of IC-planar Graphs
An IC-plane graph is a topological graph where every edge is crossed at most
once and no two crossed edges share a vertex. We show that every IC-plane graph
has a visibility drawing where every vertex is an L-shape, and every edge is
either a horizontal or vertical segment. As a byproduct of our drawing
technique, we prove that an IC-plane graph has a RAC drawing in quadratic area
with at most two bends per edge
Convex-Arc Drawings of Pseudolines
A weak pseudoline arrangement is a topological generalization of a line
arrangement, consisting of curves topologically equivalent to lines that cross
each other at most once. We consider arrangements that are outerplanar---each
crossing is incident to an unbounded face---and simple---each crossing point is
the crossing of only two curves. We show that these arrangements can be
represented by chords of a circle, by convex polygonal chains with only two
bends, or by hyperbolic lines. Simple but non-outerplanar arrangements
(non-weak) can be represented by convex polygonal chains or convex smooth
curves of linear complexity.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures. A preliminary announcement of these results was
made as a poster at the 21st International Symposium on Graph Drawing,
Bordeaux, France, September 2013, and published in Lecture Notes in Computer
Science 8242, Springer, 2013, pp. 522--52
Straight-line Drawability of a Planar Graph Plus an Edge
We investigate straight-line drawings of topological graphs that consist of a
planar graph plus one edge, also called almost-planar graphs. We present a
characterization of such graphs that admit a straight-line drawing. The
characterization enables a linear-time testing algorithm to determine whether
an almost-planar graph admits a straight-line drawing, and a linear-time
drawing algorithm that constructs such a drawing, if it exists. We also show
that some almost-planar graphs require exponential area for a straight-line
drawing
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