English

Recognizing unit multiple intervals is hard

Computational Complexity 2023-09-22 v1

Abstract

Multiple interval graphs are a well-known generalization of interval graphs introduced in the 1970s to deal with situations arising naturally in scheduling and allocation. A dd-interval is the union of dd intervals on the real line, and a graph is a dd-interval graph if it is the intersection graph of dd-intervals. In particular, it is a unit dd-interval graph if it admits a dd-interval representation where every interval has unit length. Whereas it has been known for a long time that recognizing 2-interval graphs and other related classes such as 2-track interval graphs is NP-complete, the complexity of recognizing unit 2-interval graphs remains open. Here, we settle this question by proving that the recognition of unit 2-interval graphs is also NP-complete. Our proof technique uses a completely different approach from the other hardness results of recognizing related classes. Furthermore, we extend the result for unit dd-interval graphs for any d2d\geq 2, which does not follow directly in graph recognition problems --as an example, it took almost 20 years to close the gap between d=2d=2 and d>2d> 2 for the recognition of dd-track interval graphs. Our result has several implications, including that recognizing (x,,x)(x, \dots, x) dd-interval graphs and depth rr unit 2-interval graphs is NP-complete for every x11x\geq 11 and every r4r\geq 4.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2309.11908,
  title  = {Recognizing unit multiple intervals is hard},
  author = {Virginia Ardévol Martínez and Romeo Rizzi and Florian Sikora and Stéphane Vialette},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.11908},
  year   = {2023}
}

Comments

Accepted in ISAAC 2023