English

No Selection Lemma for Empty Triangles

Computational Geometry 2022-10-04 v1

Abstract

Let SS be a set of nn points in general position in the plane. The Second Selection Lemma states that for any family of Θ(n3)\Theta(n^3) triangles spanned by SS, there exists a point of the plane that lies in a constant fraction of them. For families of Θ(n3α)\Theta(n^{3-\alpha}) triangles, with 0α10\le \alpha \le 1, there might not be a point in more than Θ(n32α)\Theta(n^{3-2\alpha}) of those triangles. An empty triangle of SS is a triangle spanned by SS not containing any point of SS in its interior. B\'ar\'any conjectured that there exist an edge spanned by SS that is incident to a super constant number of empty triangles of SS. The number of empty triangles of SS might be O(n2)O(n^2); in such a case, on average, every edge spanned by SS is incident to a constant number of empty triangles. The conjecture of B\'ar\'any suggests that for the class of empty triangles the above upper bound might not hold. In this paper we show that, somewhat surprisingly, the above upper bound does in fact hold for empty triangles. Specifically, we show that for any integer nn and real number 0α10\leq \alpha \leq 1 there exists a point set of size nn with Θ(n3α)\Theta(n^{3-\alpha}) empty triangles such that any point of the plane is only in O(n32α)O(n^{3-2\alpha}) empty triangles.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2210.00630,
  title  = {No Selection Lemma for Empty Triangles},
  author = {Ruy Fabila-Monroy and Carlos Hidalgo-Toscano and Daniel Perz and Birgit Vogtenhuber},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2210.00630},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

Some results were presented at EuroComb2022