On $r$-Guarding Thin Orthogonal Polygons
Abstract
Guarding a polygon with few guards is an old and well-studied problem in computational geometry. Here we consider the following variant: We assume that the polygon is orthogonal and thin in some sense, and we consider a point to guard a point if and only if the minimum axis-aligned rectangle spanned by and is inside the polygon. A simple proof shows that this problem is NP-hard on orthogonal polygons with holes, even if the polygon is thin. If there are no holes, then a thin polygon becomes a tree polygon in the sense that the so-called dual graph of the polygon is a tree. It was known that finding the minimum set of -guards is polynomial for tree polygons, but the run-time was . We show here that with a different approach the running time becomes linear, answering a question posed by Biedl et al. (SoCG 2011). Furthermore, the approach is much more general, allowing to specify subsets of points to guard and guards to use, and it generalizes to polygons with holes or thickness , becoming fixed-parameter tractable in .
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Cite
@article{arxiv.1604.07100,
title = {On $r$-Guarding Thin Orthogonal Polygons},
author = {Therese Biedl and Saeed Mehrabi},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1604.07100},
year = {2016}
}
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18 pages