Long Alternating Paths Exist
Abstract
Let be a set of points in convex position, such that points are colored red and points are colored blue. A non-crossing alternating path on of length is a sequence of points from so that (i) all points are pairwise distinct; (ii) any two consecutive points , have different colors; and (iii) any two segments and have disjoint relative interiors, for . We show that there is an absolute constant , independent of and of the coloring, such that always admits a non-crossing alternating path of length at least . The result is obtained through a slightly stronger statement: there always exists a non-crossing bichromatic separated matching on at least points of . This is a properly colored matching whose segments are pairwise disjoint and intersected by common line. For both versions, this is the first improvement of the easily obtained lower bound of by an additive term linear in . The best known published upper bounds are asymptotically of order .
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2003.13291,
title = {Long Alternating Paths Exist},
author = {Wolfgang Mulzer and Pavel Valtr},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2003.13291},
year = {2020}
}
Comments
26 pages, 11 figures