151 research outputs found
A Spanner for the Day After
We show how to construct -spanner over a set of
points in that is resilient to a catastrophic failure of nodes.
Specifically, for prescribed parameters , the
computed spanner has edges, where . Furthermore, for any , and
any deleted set of points, the residual graph is -spanner for all the points of except for
of them. No previous constructions, beyond the trivial clique
with edges, were known such that only a tiny additional fraction
(i.e., ) lose their distance preserving connectivity.
Our construction works by first solving the exact problem in one dimension,
and then showing a surprisingly simple and elegant construction in higher
dimensions, that uses the one-dimensional construction in a black box fashion
Distributed Construction of Lightweight Spanners for Unit Ball Graphs
Resolving an open question from 2006 [Damian et al., 2006], we prove the existence of light-weight bounded-degree spanners for unit ball graphs in the metrics of bounded doubling dimension, and we design a simple ?(log^*n)-round distributed algorithm in the LOCAL model of computation, that given a unit ball graph G with n vertices and a positive constant ? < 1 finds a (1+?)-spanner with constant bounds on its maximum degree and its lightness using only 2-hop neighborhood information. This immediately improves the best prior lightness bound, the algorithm of Damian, Pandit, and Pemmaraju [Damian et al., 2006], which runs in ?(log^*n) rounds in the LOCAL model, but has a ?(log ?) bound on its lightness, where ? is the ratio of the length of the longest edge to the length of the shortest edge in the unit ball graph. Next, we adjust our algorithm to work in the CONGEST model, without changing its round complexity, hence proposing the first spanner construction for unit ball graphs in the CONGEST model of computation. We further study the problem in the two dimensional Euclidean plane and we provide a construction with similar properties that has a constant average number of edge intersections per node. Lastly, we provide experimental results that confirm our theoretical bounds, and show an efficient performance from our distributed algorithm compared to the best known centralized construction
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