English

Distinct Distances in Graph Drawings

Combinatorics 2008-09-09 v1

Abstract

The \emph{distance-number} of a graph GG is the minimum number of distinct edge-lengths over all straight-line drawings of GG in the plane. This definition generalises many well-known concepts in combinatorial geometry. We consider the distance-number of trees, graphs with no K4K^-_4-minor, complete bipartite graphs, complete graphs, and cartesian products. Our main results concern the distance-number of graphs with bounded degree. We prove that nn-vertex graphs with bounded maximum degree and bounded treewidth have distance-number in O(logn)\mathcal{O}(\log n). To conclude such a logarithmic upper bound, both the degree and the treewidth need to be bounded. In particular, we construct graphs with treewidth 2 and polynomial distance-number. Similarly, we prove that there exist graphs with maximum degree 5 and arbitrarily large distance-number. Moreover, as Δ\Delta increases the existential lower bound on the distance-number of Δ\Delta-regular graphs tends to Ω(n0.864138)\Omega(n^{0.864138}).

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0804.3690,
  title  = {Distinct Distances in Graph Drawings},
  author = {Paz Carmi and Vida Dujmović and Pat Morin and David R. Wood},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0804.3690},
  year   = {2008}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:33:50.719Z