108 research outputs found
Covering Paths and Trees for Planar Grids
Given a set of points in the plane, a covering path is a polygonal path that
visits all the points. In this paper we consider covering paths of the vertices
of an n x m grid. We show that the minimal number of segments of such a path is
except when we allow crossings and , in which case the
minimal number of segments of such a path is , i.e., in this case
we can save one segment. In fact we show that these are true even if we
consider covering trees instead of paths.
These results extend previous works on axis-aligned covering paths of n x m
grids and complement the recent study of covering paths for points in general
position, in which case the problem becomes significantly harder and is still
open
Coloring half-planes and bottomless rectangles
We prove lower and upper bounds for the chromatic number of certain
hypergraphs defined by geometric regions. This problem has close relations to
conflict-free colorings. One of the most interesting type of regions to
consider for this problem is that of the axis-parallel rectangles. We
completely solve the problem for a special case of them, for bottomless
rectangles. We also give an almost complete answer for half-planes and pose
several open problems. Moreover we give efficient coloring algorithms
Nonrepetitive colorings of lexicographic product of graphs
A coloring of the vertices of a graph is nonrepetitive if there
exists no path for which for all
. Given graphs and with , the lexicographic
product is the graph obtained by substituting every vertex of by a
copy of , and every edge of by a copy of . %Our main results
are the following. We prove that for a sufficiently long path , a
nonrepetitive coloring of needs at least
colors. If then we need exactly colors to nonrepetitively color
, where is the empty graph on vertices. If we further require
that every copy of be rainbow-colored and the path is sufficiently
long, then the smallest number of colors needed for is at least
and at most . Finally, we define fractional nonrepetitive
colorings of graphs and consider the connections between this notion and the
above results
More on Decomposing Coverings by Octants
In this note we improve our upper bound given earlier by showing that every
9-fold covering of a point set in the space by finitely many translates of an
octant decomposes into two coverings, and our lower bound by a construction for
a 4-fold covering that does not decompose into two coverings. The same bounds
also hold for coverings of points in by finitely many homothets or
translates of a triangle. We also prove that certain dynamic interval coloring
problems are equivalent to the above question
Aligned plane drawings of the generalized Delaunay-graphs for pseudo-disks
We study general Delaunay-graphs, which are natural generalizations of
Delaunay triangulations to arbitrary families, in particular to pseudo-disks.
We prove that for any finite pseudo-disk family and point set, there is a plane
drawing of their Delaunay-graph such that every edge lies inside every
pseudo-disk that contains its endpoints
Convex Polygons are Self-Coverable
We introduce a new notion for geometric families called self-coverability and
show that homothets of convex polygons are self-coverable. As a corollary, we
obtain several results about coloring point sets such that any member of the
family with many points contains all colors. This is dual (and in some cases
equivalent) to the much investigated cover-decomposability problem
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