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Maximum thick paths in static and dynamic environments
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Annual Symposium on Computational Geometry archive
Proceedings of the twenty-fourth annual symposium on Computational geometry table of contents
College Park, MD, USA
SESSION: 1 table of contents
Pages 20-27  
Year of Publication: 2008
ISBN:978-1-60558-071-5
Authors
Esther M. Arkin  Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY, USA
Joseph S.B. Mitchell  Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY, USA
Valentin Polishchuk  University of Helsinki and Helsinki University of Technology, Helsinki, Finland
Sponsors
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
SIGGRAPH: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques
SIGACT: ACM Special Interest Group on Algorithms and Computation Theory
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

We consider the problem of finding a maximum number of disjoint paths for unit disks moving amidst static or dynamic obstacles. For the static case we give efficient exact algorithms, based on adapting the "continuous uppermost path" paradigm. As a by-product, we establish a continuous analogue of Menger's Theorem. (In this extended abstract we only state these results.)

Next we study the dynamic problem in which the obstacles may move, appear and disappear, and otherwise change with time in a known manner; in addition, the disks are required to enter/exit the domain during prescribed time intervals. We observe that (unless P=NP), for any α,β > 0, one cannot decide in polynomial time whether there exist [αΚ] paths for disks of radius βR, where K is the maximum number of paths for radius-R disks. The problem is hard even if the obstacles are static, and only the entry/exit time intervals are specified for the disks. This motivates studying "dual" approximations, compromising on the radius of the disks and on the maximum speed of motion.

Our main result is a pseudopolynomial-time dual-approximation algorithm: if K unit disks, each with unit bound on the speed, may be routed through an environment, our algorithm finds (at least) K paths for disks of radius Ω(1) moving with speed O(1). The algorithm computes a maxflow with "forbidden pairs" in an "adaptive" grid, laid out in space-time. Although (as we show) in general finding even an approximation to the maxflow with forbidden pairs is not possible (unless P=NP), a careful choice of time discetization and a non-uniform grid of "way-points" allows us to give provable approximation guarantees on the quality of the solution produced by the algorithm. Our algorithm extends to higher dimensions and to finding paths for translational motion of arbitrary-shape objects.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
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Collaborative Colleagues:
Esther M. Arkin: colleagues
Joseph S.B. Mitchell: colleagues
Valentin Polishchuk: colleagues