General
Announcement
Program
Abstract
of
the Talks
Participants
Contact
UNT
Campus Map |
|
Keynote Address
Title: Directions in Discrete Geometry
Speaker: János Pach
Abstract:
In the past ten years, Erdos-type extremal problems on the maximum
number of incidences between points and lines, and various other geometric
objects have turned out to be intimately related to important questions
in additive number theory (Szemeredi's and Freiman's theorems on arithmetic
progressions), in analysis (Kakeya's problem), in combinatorics (designs,
finite projective planes), and found many applications in computer science
(motion planning). The recent work of Bourgain, Gowers, Tao, Wolff,
and others opened new directions of research. After a quick overview of
these developments, we concentrate on a few specific elementary problems
in discrete geometry, related to the number of different directions induced
by a point set.
According to a celebrated theorem of Sylvester and Gallai, any finite
set S of non-collinear points in the plane has two elements whose connecting
line does not pass through any other point in S. Erdos noticed that this
result immediately implies that any set of n non-collinear points in the
plane determines at least n different connecting lines. Equality is attained
if and only if all but one of the points are on a line. In the same spirit,
Scott posed two similar questions in 1970: (1) Is it true that the number
of different directions assumed by the connecting lines of n > 3 non-collinear
points in the plane is at least n-1? (2) Is it true that the number of
different directions assumed by the connecting lines of n > 5 non-coplanar
points in 3-space is at least 2n-3?
The first question was answered in the affirmative by Ungar in 1982,
using allowable sequences. Recently, Pinchasi, Sharir, and the speaker
solved the second problem of Scott.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Invited Talks
Title: Geometric Approximation Using Core Sets
Speaker: Pankaj K. Agarwal
Abstract:
This talk presents a general technique for approximating the `extent''
of a set of points in d-dimensional space. Extent is an abstraction
that
includes as special cases the diameter, width, and smallest bounding
box, ball, or cylinder. For a given tolerance epsilon>0, the technique
computes a ``core'' subset of the input points that approximates the
extent of the whole set. The size of the core-set depends upon
epsilon but is independent of the size of the input set, and for any fixed
epsilon, the core-set can be computed in linear time. The technique
extends to maintaining an approximation of the extent of moving points
and to points given online in the streaming model. The technique also allows
fitting various shapes, including spheres and cylinders, through a point
set. Various extensions of this technique and open problems are also discussed.
Joint work with Sariel Har-Peled and Kasturi Varadarjan.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title: Edge weights and vertex colours
Speaker: Michal Karonski
Abstract:
A weighting of the edges of a graph with integer weights gives rise
to a weighting of the vertices, the weight of a vertex being the sum of
the weights of its incident edges. Such a weighting induces a vertex coloring,
i.e., by assigning the same color to vertices with the same weight.
An assignment of positive integer weights to the edges of a simple graph
G is called irregular if the weighted degrees of the vertices are all different,
i.e., the induced vertex coloring is trivial. The irregularity strength,
s(G), is the maximal weight, minimized over all irregular assignments,
and is set to infinity if no such assignment is possible.
In the first part of my talk I will discuss results from a recent
paper [1] where we show that s(G) <= c_1 n / d, for graphs
with maximum degree D <= n^{1/2}, and s(G) <= c_2 (log n) n /
d, for graphs with
D > n^{1/2}, where c_1 and c_2 are explicit constants, and d
denotes minimum degree of G.
It is natural to consider edge weightings where we require only that
adjacent vertices have different weights --- that is, the vertex
weighting induce a proper colouring of the graph. In this context,
in [2] we raise the following question, in which a ``non-trivial graph''
refers to a connected graph with at least three vertices.
Question: Is it possible to weight the edges of any non-trivial
graph with the integers 1,2,3 such that the resultant vertex weighting
is a proper colouring?
In the second part of my talk I will offer two pieces of information,
given in [2], in relation to the above question:
first, that a weighting is possible for 3-colourable graphs, and secondly
that, if real, rather than just integer, weights are permitted, then
a finite number of weights suffices for all graphs.
To prove all results in [1] and [2], we are using a combination
of
deterministic and probabilistic techniques.
References
[1] R.J. Gould, A. Frieze, M. Karonski and F. Pfender, On graph irregularity
strength, Journal of Graph Theory, 41 (2002) 120--137.
[2]M. Karonski, T. Luczak, A. Thomason, Edge weights and vertex colours,
submitted.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title: On Polyhedra Induced by Point Sets in Space
Speaker: Godfried Toussaint
Abstract:
Given a set S of n points in the plane (not all on a line) it is well
known that it is always possible to polygonize S, i.e., construct a simple
polygon P such that the vertices of P are precisely the given points in
S. In 1994 Grunbaum showed that an analogous theorem holds in 3-dimensional
space. More precisely, if S is a set of n points in space (not all of which
are coplanar) then it is always possible to polyhedronize S, i,e., construct
a simple (sphere-like) polyhedron P such that the vertices of P are precisely
the given points in S. Grunbaum's constructive proof may yield Schonhardt
polyhedra that cannot be triangulated. In this talk several alternative
algorithms for constructing such polyhedra induced by a set of points will
be presented. The methods yield polyhedra which not only may always be
triangulated, but which enjoy several other useful properties as well.
Such properties include polyhedra that are, terrains, star-shaped, have
hamiltonian skeletons, and admit efficient point location queries.
Furthermore, it will be shown that polyhedronizations with a variety
of such useful properties can be computed efficiently in O(n log n) worst-case
time.
This is joint work with Ferran Hurtado and Joan Trias of the Universidad
Politecnica de Catalunya, Barcelona.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

|