4,075 research outputs found
Visibility Graphs, Dismantlability, and the Cops and Robbers Game
We study versions of cop and robber pursuit-evasion games on the visibility
graphs of polygons, and inside polygons with straight and curved sides. Each
player has full information about the other player's location, players take
turns, and the robber is captured when the cop arrives at the same point as the
robber. In visibility graphs we show the cop can always win because visibility
graphs are dismantlable, which is interesting as one of the few results
relating visibility graphs to other known graph classes. We extend this to show
that the cop wins games in which players move along straight line segments
inside any polygon and, more generally, inside any simply connected planar
region with a reasonable boundary. Essentially, our problem is a type of
pursuit-evasion using the link metric rather than the Euclidean metric, and our
result provides an interesting class of infinite cop-win graphs.Comment: 23 page
Towards an Iterative Algorithm for the Optimal Boundary Coverage of a 3D Environment
This paper presents a new optimal algorithm for locating a set of sensors in 3D able to see the boundaries of a polyhedral environment. Our approach is iterative and is based on a lower bound on the sensors' number and on a restriction of the original problem requiring each face to be observed in its entirety by at least one sensor. The lower bound allows evaluating the quality of the solution obtained at each step, and halting the algorithm if the solution is satisfactory. The algorithm asymptotically converges to the optimal solution of the unrestricted problem if the faces are subdivided into smaller part
On k-Convex Polygons
We introduce a notion of -convexity and explore polygons in the plane that
have this property. Polygons which are \mbox{-convex} can be triangulated
with fast yet simple algorithms. However, recognizing them in general is a
3SUM-hard problem. We give a characterization of \mbox{-convex} polygons, a
particularly interesting class, and show how to recognize them in \mbox{} time. A description of their shape is given as well, which leads to
Erd\H{o}s-Szekeres type results regarding subconfigurations of their vertex
sets. Finally, we introduce the concept of generalized geometric permutations,
and show that their number can be exponential in the number of
\mbox{-convex} objects considered.Comment: 23 pages, 19 figure
Computing a rectilinear shortest path amid splinegons in plane
We reduce the problem of computing a rectilinear shortest path between two
given points s and t in the splinegonal domain \calS to the problem of
computing a rectilinear shortest path between two points in the polygonal
domain. As part of this, we define a polygonal domain \calP from \calS and
transform a rectilinear shortest path computed in \calP to a path between s and
t amid splinegon obstacles in \calS. When \calS comprises of h pairwise
disjoint splinegons with a total of n vertices, excluding the time to compute a
rectilinear shortest path amid polygons in \calP, our reduction algorithm takes
O(n + h \lg{n}) time. For the special case of \calS comprising of concave-in
splinegons, we have devised another algorithm in which the reduction procedure
does not rely on the structures used in the algorithm to compute a rectilinear
shortest path in polygonal domain. As part of these, we have characterized few
of the properties of rectilinear shortest paths amid splinegons which could be
of independent interest
Simple Wriggling is Hard unless You Are a Fat Hippo
We prove that it is NP-hard to decide whether two points in a polygonal
domain with holes can be connected by a wire. This implies that finding any
approximation to the shortest path for a long snake amidst polygonal obstacles
is NP-hard. On the positive side, we show that snake's problem is
"length-tractable": if the snake is "fat", i.e., its length/width ratio is
small, the shortest path can be computed in polynomial time.Comment: A shorter version is to be presented at FUN 201
- âŠ