Continuous Defensive Domination Problems
Abstract
The problem Defensive -Covering, for some covering range , is a continuous facility location problem on undirected graphs where all edges have unit length. It is a generalization of Defensive Dominating Set and -Covering. An attack and defense are sets of points, which are on vertices or on the interior of an edge. A defense counters an attack, if there is a matching of the points in the defense to the points in the attack, such that any matched points have distance at most , and every point in the attack is matched. The task is, given a graph and numbers , to find a defense of size at most that counters every possible attack of size at most . We study the complexity of this problem in various different settings. We show that if the attack is restricted to vertices, the problem is -complete for large , but if the attack may consist of any points on the graph, it is NP-complete. Additionally, we analyze how the complexity changes if the attacks or defenses may be a multiset. If the defense is allowed to be a multiset, the complexity does not change in any case we consider, while if the attack is allowed to be a multiset, the problem often becomes easier. To show containment in the various complexity classes, we introduce a number of discretization arguments, which show that solutions with a regular structure must always exist.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2605.10607,
title = {Continuous Defensive Domination Problems},
author = {Christoph Grüne and Tom Janßen},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2605.10607},
year = {2026}
}