To enumerate 3-manifold triangulations with a given property, one typically
begins with a set of potential face pairing graphs (also known as dual
1-skeletons), and then attempts to flesh each graph out into full
triangulations using an exponential-time enumeration. However, asymptotically
most graphs do not result in any 3-manifold triangulation, which leads to
significant "wasted time" in topological enumeration algorithms. Here we give a
new algorithm to determine whether a given face pairing graph supports any
3-manifold triangulation, and show this to be fixed parameter tractable in the
treewidth of the graph.
We extend this result to a "meta-theorem" by defining a broad class of
properties of triangulations, each with a corresponding fixed parameter
tractable existence algorithm. We explicitly implement this algorithm in the
most generic setting, and we identify heuristics that in practice are seen to
mitigate the large constants that so often occur in parameterised complexity,
highlighting the practicality of our techniques.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figure