Plane Hop Spanners for Unit Disk Graphs: Simpler and Better

02/26/2019
by   Ahmad Biniaz, et al.
0

The unit disk graph (UDG) is a widely employed model for the study of wireless networks. In this model, wireless nodes are represented by points in the plane and there is an edge between two points if and only if their Euclidean distance is at most one. A hop spanner for the UDG is a spanning subgraph H such that for every edge (p,q) in the UDG the topological shortest path between p and q in H has a constant number of edges. The hop stretch factor of H is the maximum number of edges of these paths. A hop spanner is plane (i.e. embedded planar) if its edges do not cross each other. The problem of constructing hop spanners for the UDG has received considerable attention in both computational geometry and wireless ad hoc networks. Despite this attention, there has not been significant progress on getting hop spanners that (i) are plane, and (ii) have low hop stretch factor. Previous constructions either do not ensure the planarity or have high hop stretch factor. The only construction that satisfies both conditions is due to Catusse, Chepoi, and Vaxès (2010); their plane hop spanner has hop stretch factor at most 449. Our main result is a simple algorithm that constructs a plane hop spanner for the UDG. In addition to the simplicity, the hop stretch factor of the constructed spanner is at most 341. Even though the algorithm itself is simple, its analysis is rather involved. Several results on the plane geometry are established in the course of the proof. These results are of independent interest.

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