31,704 research outputs found
Convexity-Increasing Morphs of Planar Graphs
We study the problem of convexifying drawings of planar graphs. Given any
planar straight-line drawing of an internally 3-connected graph, we show how to
morph the drawing to one with strictly convex faces while maintaining planarity
at all times. Our morph is convexity-increasing, meaning that once an angle is
convex, it remains convex. We give an efficient algorithm that constructs such
a morph as a composition of a linear number of steps where each step either
moves vertices along horizontal lines or moves vertices along vertical lines.
Moreover, we show that a linear number of steps is worst-case optimal.
To obtain our result, we use a well-known technique by Hong and Nagamochi for
finding redrawings with convex faces while preserving y-coordinates. Using a
variant of Tutte's graph drawing algorithm, we obtain a new proof of Hong and
Nagamochi's result which comes with a better running time. This is of
independent interest, as Hong and Nagamochi's technique serves as a building
block in existing morphing algorithms.Comment: Preliminary version in Proc. WG 201
Lombardi Drawings of Graphs
We introduce the notion of Lombardi graph drawings, named after the American
abstract artist Mark Lombardi. In these drawings, edges are represented as
circular arcs rather than as line segments or polylines, and the vertices have
perfect angular resolution: the edges are equally spaced around each vertex. We
describe algorithms for finding Lombardi drawings of regular graphs, graphs of
bounded degeneracy, and certain families of planar graphs.Comment: Expanded version of paper appearing in the 18th International
Symposium on Graph Drawing (GD 2010). 13 pages, 7 figure
Classifying Voronoi graphs of hex spheres
A hex sphere is a singular Euclidean sphere with four cones points whose cone
angles are (integer) multiples of 2*pi/3 but less than 2*pi. Given a hex sphere
M, we consider its Voronoi decomposition centered at the two cone points with
greatest cone angles. In this paper we use elementary Euclidean geometry to
describe the Voronoi regions of hex spheres and classify the Voronoi graphs of
hex spheres (up to graph isomorphism).Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
Notes on large angle crossing graphs
A graph G is an a-angle crossing (aAC) graph if every pair of crossing edges
in G intersect at an angle of at least a. The concept of right angle crossing
(RAC) graphs (a=Pi/2) was recently introduced by Didimo et. al. It was shown
that any RAC graph with n vertices has at most 4n-10 edges and that there are
infinitely many values of n for which there exists a RAC graph with n vertices
and 4n-10 edges. In this paper, we give upper and lower bounds for the number
of edges in aAC graphs for all 0 < a < Pi/2
Graphs with Plane Outside-Obstacle Representations
An \emph{obstacle representation} of a graph consists of a set of polygonal
obstacles and a distinct point for each vertex such that two points see each
other if and only if the corresponding vertices are adjacent. Obstacle
representations are a recent generalization of classical polygon--vertex
visibility graphs, for which the characterization and recognition problems are
long-standing open questions.
In this paper, we study \emph{plane outside-obstacle representations}, where
all obstacles lie in the unbounded face of the representation and no two
visibility segments cross. We give a combinatorial characterization of the
biconnected graphs that admit such a representation. Based on this
characterization, we present a simple linear-time recognition algorithm for
these graphs. As a side result, we show that the plane vertex--polygon
visibility graphs are exactly the maximal outerplanar graphs and that every
chordal outerplanar graph has an outside-obstacle representation.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
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