Treffer: Relaxed spanners for directed disk graphs

Title:
Relaxed spanners for directed disk graphs
Contributors:
Department of Computer Science and Applied Mathematics [Rehovot], Weizmann Institute of Science [Rehovot, Israël], Department of Computer Science, Bar-Ilan University [Israël], Inria Nancy Grand Est & Loria, Jean-Yves Marion and Thomas Schwentick
Source:
27th International Symposium on Theoretical Aspects of Computer Science - STACS 2010. :609-620
Publisher Information:
HAL CCSD, 2010.
Publication Year:
2010
Collection:
collection:STACS2010
Subject Geographic:
Original Identifier:
HAL:
Document Type:
Konferenz conferenceObject<br />Conference papers
Language:
English
Rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
Accession Number:
edshal.inria.00455800v1
Database:
HAL

Weitere Informationen

Let $(V,\delta)$ be a finite metric space, where $V$ is a set of $n$ points and $\delta$ is a distance function defined for these points. Assume that $(V,\delta)$ has a constant doubling dimension $d$ and assume that each point $p\in V$ has a disk of radius $r(p)$ around it. The disk graph that corresponds to $V$ and $r(\cdot)$ is a \emph{directed} graph $I(V,E,r)$, whose vertices are the points of $V$ and whose edge set includes a directed edge from $p$ to $q$ if $\delta(p,q)\leq r(p)$. In \cite{PeRo08} we presented an algorithm for constructing a $(1+\eps)$-spanner of size $O(n/\eps^d \log M)$, where $M$ is the maximal radius $r(p)$. The current paper presents two results. The first shows that the spanner of \cite{PeRo08} is essentially optimal, i.e., for metrics of constant doubling dimension it is not possible to guarantee a spanner whose size is independent of $M$. The second result shows that by slightly relaxing the requirements and allowing a small perturbation of the radius assignment, considerably better spanners can be constructed. In particular, we show that if it is allowed to use edges of the disk graph $I(V,E,r_{1+\eps})$, where $r_{1+\eps}(p) = (1+\eps)\cdot r(p)$ for every $p\in V$, then it is possible to get a $(1+\eps)$-spanner of size $O(n/\eps^d)$ for $I(V,E,r)$. Our algorithm is simple and can be implemented efficiently.