Recognizing IC-Planar and NIC-Planar Graphs
Abstract
We prove that triangulated IC-planar and NIC-planar graphs can be recognized in cubic time. A graph is 1-planar if it can be drawn in the plane with at most one crossing per edge. A drawing is IC-planar if, in addition, each vertex is incident to at most one crossing edge and NIC-planar if two pairs of crossing edges share at most one vertex. In a triangulated drawing each face is a triangle. In consequence, planar-maximal and maximal IC-planar and NIC-planar graphs can be recognized in O(n^5) time and maximum and optimal ones in O(n^3) time. In contrast, recognizing 3-connected IC-planar and NIC-planar graphs is NP-complete, even if the graphs are given with a rotation system which describes the cyclic ordering of the edges at each vertex. Our results complement similar ones for 1-planar graphs.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1610.08884,
title = {Recognizing IC-Planar and NIC-Planar Graphs},
author = {Franz J. Brandenburg},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1610.08884},
year = {2016}
}
Comments
26 pages, 23 figures