379 research outputs found
Euclidean Greedy Drawings of Trees
Greedy embedding (or drawing) is a simple and efficient strategy to route
messages in wireless sensor networks. For each source-destination pair of nodes
s, t in a greedy embedding there is always a neighbor u of s that is closer to
t according to some distance metric. The existence of greedy embeddings in the
Euclidean plane R^2 is known for certain graph classes such as 3-connected
planar graphs. We completely characterize the trees that admit a greedy
embedding in R^2. This answers a question by Angelini et al. (Graph Drawing
2009) and is a further step in characterizing the graphs that admit Euclidean
greedy embeddings.Comment: Expanded version of a paper to appear in the 21st European Symposium
on Algorithms (ESA 2013). 24 pages, 20 figure
Remarks on Category-Based Routing in Social Networks
It is well known that individuals can route messages on short paths through
social networks, given only simple information about the target and using only
local knowledge about the topology. Sociologists conjecture that people find
routes greedily by passing the message to an acquaintance that has more in
common with the target than themselves, e.g. if a dentist in Saarbr\"ucken
wants to send a message to a specific lawyer in Munich, he may forward it to
someone who is a lawyer and/or lives in Munich. Modelling this setting,
Eppstein et al. introduced the notion of category-based routing. The goal is to
assign a set of categories to each node of a graph such that greedy routing is
possible. By proving bounds on the number of categories a node has to be in we
can argue about the plausibility of the underlying sociological model. In this
paper we substantially improve the upper bounds introduced by Eppstein et al.
and prove new lower bounds.Comment: 21 page
On the Area Requirements of Planar Greedy Drawings of Triconnected Planar Graphs
In this paper we study the area requirements of planar greedy drawings of
triconnected planar graphs. Cao, Strelzoff, and Sun exhibited a family
of subdivisions of triconnected plane graphs and claimed that every planar
greedy drawing of the graphs in respecting the prescribed plane
embedding requires exponential area. However, we show that every -vertex
graph in actually has a planar greedy drawing respecting the
prescribed plane embedding on an grid. This reopens the
question whether triconnected planar graphs admit planar greedy drawings on a
polynomial-size grid. Further, we provide evidence for a positive answer to the
above question by proving that every -vertex Halin graph admits a planar
greedy drawing on an grid. Both such results are obtained by
actually constructing drawings that are convex and angle-monotone. Finally, we
consider -Schnyder drawings, which are angle-monotone and hence greedy
if , and show that there exist planar triangulations for
which every -Schnyder drawing with a fixed requires
exponential area for any resolution rule
Drawing Graphs as Spanners
We study the problem of embedding graphs in the plane as good geometric
spanners. That is, for a graph , the goal is to construct a straight-line
drawing of in the plane such that, for any two vertices and
of , the ratio between the minimum length of any path from to
and the Euclidean distance between and is small. The maximum such
ratio, over all pairs of vertices of , is the spanning ratio of .
First, we show that deciding whether a graph admits a straight-line drawing
with spanning ratio , a proper straight-line drawing with spanning ratio
, and a planar straight-line drawing with spanning ratio are
NP-complete, -complete, and linear-time solvable problems,
respectively, where a drawing is proper if no two vertices overlap and no edge
overlaps a vertex.
Second, we show that moving from spanning ratio to spanning ratio
allows us to draw every graph. Namely, we prove that, for every
, every (planar) graph admits a proper (resp. planar) straight-line
drawing with spanning ratio smaller than .
Third, our drawings with spanning ratio smaller than have large
edge-length ratio, that is, the ratio between the length of the longest edge
and the length of the shortest edge is exponential. We show that this is
sometimes unavoidable. More generally, we identify having bounded toughness as
the criterion that distinguishes graphs that admit straight-line drawings with
constant spanning ratio and polynomial edge-length ratio from graphs that
require exponential edge-length ratio in any straight-line drawing with
constant spanning ratio
On Planar Greedy Drawings of 3-Connected Planar Graphs
A graph drawing is greedy if, for every ordered pair of vertices (x,y), there is a path from x to y such that the Euclidean distance to y decreases monotonically at every vertex of the path. Greedy drawings support a simple geometric routing scheme, in which any node that has to send a packet to a destination "greedily" forwards the packet to any neighbor that is closer to the destination than itself, according to the Euclidean distance in the drawing. In a greedy drawing such a neighbor always exists and hence this routing scheme is guaranteed to succeed.
In 2004 Papadimitriou and Ratajczak stated two conjectures related to greedy drawings. The greedy embedding conjecture states that every 3-connected planar graph admits a greedy drawing. The convex greedy embedding conjecture asserts that every 3-connected planar graph admits a planar greedy drawing in which the faces are delimited by convex polygons. In 2008 the greedy embedding conjecture was settled in the positive by Leighton and Moitra.
In this paper we prove that every 3-connected planar graph admits a planar greedy drawing. Apart from being a strengthening of Leighton and Moitra\u27s result, this theorem constitutes a natural intermediate step towards a proof of the convex greedy embedding conjecture
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