546 research outputs found
Optimal Euclidean spanners: really short, thin and lanky
In a seminal STOC'95 paper, titled "Euclidean spanners: short, thin and
lanky", Arya et al. devised a construction of Euclidean (1+\eps)-spanners
that achieves constant degree, diameter , and weight , and has running time . This construction
applies to -point constant-dimensional Euclidean spaces. Moreover, Arya et
al. conjectured that the weight bound can be improved by a logarithmic factor,
without increasing the degree and the diameter of the spanner, and within the
same running time.
This conjecture of Arya et al. became a central open problem in the area of
Euclidean spanners.
In this paper we resolve the long-standing conjecture of Arya et al. in the
affirmative. Specifically, we present a construction of spanners with the same
stretch, degree, diameter, and running time, as in Arya et al.'s result, but
with optimal weight .
Moreover, our result is more general in three ways. First, we demonstrate
that the conjecture holds true not only in constant-dimensional Euclidean
spaces, but also in doubling metrics. Second, we provide a general tradeoff
between the three involved parameters, which is tight in the entire range.
Third, we devise a transformation that decreases the lightness of spanners in
general metrics, while keeping all their other parameters in check. Our main
result is obtained as a corollary of this transformation.Comment: A technical report of this paper was available online from April 4,
201
Spanners for Geometric Intersection Graphs
Efficient algorithms are presented for constructing spanners in geometric
intersection graphs. For a unit ball graph in R^k, a (1+\epsilon)-spanner is
obtained using efficient partitioning of the space into hypercubes and solving
bichromatic closest pair problems. The spanner construction has almost
equivalent complexity to the construction of Euclidean minimum spanning trees.
The results are extended to arbitrary ball graphs with a sub-quadratic running
time.
For unit ball graphs, the spanners have a small separator decomposition which
can be used to obtain efficient algorithms for approximating proximity problems
like diameter and distance queries. The results on compressed quadtrees,
geometric graph separators, and diameter approximation might be of independent
interest.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, Late
Sparse geometric graphs with small dilation
Given a set S of n points in R^D, and an integer k such that 0 <= k < n, we
show that a geometric graph with vertex set S, at most n - 1 + k edges, maximum
degree five, and dilation O(n / (k+1)) can be computed in time O(n log n). For
any k, we also construct planar n-point sets for which any geometric graph with
n-1+k edges has dilation Omega(n/(k+1)); a slightly weaker statement holds if
the points of S are required to be in convex position
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