Geometric Dominating Sets
Abstract
We consider a minimizing variant of the well-known \emph{No-Three-In-Line Problem}, the \emph{Geometric Dominating Set Problem}: What is the smallest number of points in an ~grid such that every grid point lies on a common line with two of the points in the set? We show a lower bound of points and provide a constructive upper bound of size . If the points of the dominating sets are required to be in general position we provide optimal solutions for grids of size up to . For arbitrary the currently best upper bound for points in general position remains the obvious . Finally, we discuss the problem on the discrete torus where we prove an upper bound of . For even or a multiple of 3, we can even show a constant upper bound of 4. We also mention a number of open questions and some further variations of the problem.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2203.13170,
title = {Geometric Dominating Sets},
author = {Oswin Aichholzer and David Eppstein and Eva-Maria Hainzl},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2203.13170},
year = {2023}
}