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25 votes
1 answer
3k views

Number of hypercube unfoldings

While writing the code for this answer, I noticed that I not only could calculate the number of unfoldings of the $4$-cube, but also the number of the $n$-cube for more values of $n$. Basically, we ...
Moritz Firsching's user avatar
24 votes
0 answers
760 views

How much of the plane is 4-colorable?

In 1981, Falconer proved that the measurable chromatic number of the plane is at least 5. That is, there are no measurable sets $A_1,A_2,A_3,A_4\subseteq\mathbb{R}^2$, each avoiding unit distances, ...
Dustin G. Mixon's user avatar
22 votes
2 answers
900 views

Is every 1-million-connected graph rigid in 3D?

It is an old result that every $6$-connected graph is rigid in $\mathbb{R}^2$: Lovász, László, and Yechiam Yemini. "On generic rigidity in the plane." SIAM Journal on Algebraic Discrete ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
17 votes
3 answers
2k views

Applications of Kirchhoff's circuit laws to graph theory

Is there a good survey on applications of Kirchhoff's circuit laws to graph theory or/and discrete geometry? Examples: Matrix tree theorem, Squaring the square, Electrician’s proof of Euler’s ...
Anton Petrunin's user avatar
13 votes
1 answer
933 views

Drawings of complete graphs with $Z(n)$ crossings

Hill conjectured that the minimum number of crossings in a drawing of the complete graph $K_n$ in the plane is exactly $$Z(n) = \frac{1}{4} \bigg\lfloor\frac{n}{2}\bigg\rfloor \left\lfloor\frac{n-1}{...
Jan Kyncl's user avatar
  • 6,101
10 votes
2 answers
1k views

Proofs of circle packing theorem

Circle packing theorem is a famous result stating that for every connected simple planar graph $G$ there is a circle packing in the plane whose intersection graph is $G$ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
aglearner's user avatar
  • 14.3k
9 votes
2 answers
505 views

Moore graphs and finite projective geometry

In a comment on a blog post from 2009 about the hypothetical Moore graph(s) of degree 57 and girth 5, Gordon Royle offered the following observation (reproduced here in full for the sake of ...
mhum's user avatar
  • 1,645
6 votes
4 answers
2k views

Delaunay triangulations and convex hulls

This is a reference request. I have the impression that those who work in computational geometry are accustomed to the following. You have some locally finite set of sites in $\mathbb{R}^n$ and you ...
Michael Hardy's user avatar
6 votes
2 answers
400 views

Geometric dominating set: NP-complete?

Let $G=(V,E)$ be a geometric graph, a graph embedded in the plane whose edge lengths are the Euclidean distance between its endpoint vertices. Say that a set of vertices $D \subseteq V$ is a geometric ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
373 views

Genus of Tutte-Coxeter Graph

What is the genus of the Tutte-Coxeter graph -- the incidence graph of the GQ of order 2? Seems like it should be well known, since nearly every other parameter for that graph is known, but I can ...
user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
441 views

Touching-tetrahedra graphs

Have the graphs representable by touching tetrahedra been explored? Let $\cal T$ be a collection of tetrahedra in $\mathbb{R}^3$ with pairwise disjoint interiors. Define a graph $G_{\cal T}$ to have ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
646 views

Combinatorial geodesics

[There has been a flaw in my definition - as Sergei and Andreas pointed out. I hope I could fix it.] I want to understand how the concepts of directions, straight (or shortest) lines, and geodesics &...
Hans-Peter Stricker's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
230 views

Is this case of Barnette's Conjecture known?

Context: Barnette's Conjecture is that every bipartite cubic polyhedral graph is Hamiltonian. I have been interested by this problem for a long time, and I recently came up with a result. From my ...
Zach Hunter's user avatar
  • 3,499
3 votes
3 answers
330 views

Voronoi and Delaunay

Please provide some references on Voronoi and Delaunay decompositions which is mathematically written. I mean I can find several texts or links on this written for computer science students without ...
user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
394 views

Min Bend Orthogonal Knots

I am seeking literature on 3D orthogonal drawings of knots, especially minimum bend drawings. An orthogonal drawing employs segments parallel to the axes of a Cartesian coordinate system. A bend is a ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
108 views

Has this random process been studied on grid graphs?

As an offshoot of a different discussion I got curious about (uniform) random spanning trees on grid graphs (torus graphs in particular, to avoid having to think about edge effects) and what their ...
Steven Stadnicki's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
144 views

Counting homologically non-trivial and trivial cycles in $n \times n$ square lattice torus of a given length $l \geq n$

This should be a fairly standard question but I can't really seem to find a reference. Consider an $n \times n$ square lattice torus $\mathbb T$. Given a length $l \geq n$, what is the number of ...
Sanchayan Dutta's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
142 views

Dimension of convex arrangements for hypergraphs

Suppose you have a hypergraph H on n vertices. Let d be the smallest integer such that we can find an arrangement A of convex subsets in Rd so that H represent the intersections of sets in A. Has ...
Thierry Zell's user avatar
  • 4,586
2 votes
1 answer
106 views

Are zonotopes determined by their edge-graph?

General polytopes are not determined by their edge-graph (up to combinatorial equivalence). But I came accross the statement that zonotopes are determined in this way. Question: Is this true? And ...
M. Winter's user avatar
  • 13.6k
2 votes
1 answer
157 views

Bound for a sequence of vertices in a graph

I have come across the following problem. Let $d\in\mathbb{N}$. Let $G$ be any $k$-regular connected directed graph with $n$ vertices, no parallel edges and no 2-cycles. For a vertex $v\in G$, let $...
Arturo's user avatar
  • 167
2 votes
1 answer
127 views

The density of a tripartite 1-planar graph

1-planar graphs are those can be drawn in the plane so that there is at most one crossing per edge. We know that the maximum number of edges of an $n$-vertex 1-planar graph is at most $4n-8$, and the ...
Xin Zhang's user avatar
  • 1,190
2 votes
0 answers
65 views

Structure Theory for Tree Decompositions

I that $G=(V,E,W)$ is a weighted graph with positive edge weights and a finite set of vertices $K$. Let $0\le k,M\le K$ be a fixed integer. Is is known when $G$ admits the following type of ...
Timothy_G's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
393 views

Hyperbolic embedding of a directed acyclic graph defined over strings

For integer $n$ and alphabet $\Sigma$ we construct a DAG (directed acyclic graph) $G=(V,E)$ over strings $s\in\Sigma^\star$ as follows: $$V = \{s\in\Sigma^\star\colon |s|\le n\}$$ $$E = \{(s_1,s_2)\...
kvphxga's user avatar
  • 187
1 vote
1 answer
75 views

Given a vertex $u$ (of bounded degree $k$) and another vertex $v$ in a planar graph, what is the smallest number of "curves"?

Given a vertex $u$ (of bounded degree $k$) and another vertex $v$ in a planar graph $G$, what is the smallest number of "curves" in the plane drawn from $u$ to $v$ such that no $u$--$v$ path in $G$ ...
Hao S's user avatar
  • 111
1 vote
0 answers
77 views

Non-adjacent Pair of Edges with Minimal Weight Sum

Given an weighted, undirected Graph $G(V,E)$ without loops or parallel edges, what is the complexity of determining a pair of non-adjacent edges, whose sum of weights is w.l.o.g. minimal? is that ...
Manfred Weis's user avatar
  • 13.2k