Drawing Graphs on Few Circles and Few Spheres

Authors

  • Myroslav Kryven
  • Alexander Ravsky
  • Alexander Wolff

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7155/jgaa.00495

Keywords:

visual complexity , affine cover , spherical cover , segment number , arc number

Abstract

Given a drawing of a graph, its visual complexity is defined as the number of geometrical entities in the drawing, for example, the number of segments in a straight-line drawing or the number of arcs in a circular-arc drawing (in 2D). Recently, Chaplick et al. [GD 2016] introduced a different measure for the visual complexity, the affine cover number, which is the minimum number of lines (or planes) that together cover a crossing-free straight-line drawing of a graph $G$ in 2D (3D). In this paper, we introduce the spherical cover number, which is the minimum number of circles (or spheres) that together cover a crossing-free circular-arc drawing in 2D (or 3D). It turns out that spherical covers are sometimes significantly smaller than affine covers. For complete, complete bipartite, and platonic graphs, we analyze their spherical cover numbers and compare them to their affine cover numbers as well as their segment and arc numbers. We also link the spherical cover number to other graph parameters such as treewidth and linear arboricity.

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Published

2019-01-01

How to Cite

Kryven, M., Ravsky, A., & Wolff, A. (2019). Drawing Graphs on Few Circles and Few Spheres. Journal of Graph Algorithms and Applications, 23(2), 371–391. https://doi.org/10.7155/jgaa.00495

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