• DocumentCode
    3629775
  • Title

    Dynamic Connectivity: Connecting to Networks and Geometry

  • Author

    Timothy M. Chan;Mihai Patrascu;Liam Roditty

  • fYear
    2008
  • Firstpage
    95
  • Lastpage
    104
  • Abstract
    Dynamic connectivity is a well-studied problem, but so far the most compelling progress has been confined to the edge-update model: maintain an understanding of connectivity in an undirected graph, subject to edge insertions and deletions. In this paper, we study two more challenging, yet equally fundamental problems:Subgraph connectivity asks to maintain an understanding of connectivity under vertex updates: updates can turn vertices on and off, and queries refer to the subgraph induced by "on" vertices.  (For instance, this is closer to applications in networks of routers, where node faults may occur.)We describe a data structure supporting vertex updates in O~(m^{2/3}) amortized time, where m denotes the number of edges in the graph. This greatly improves over the previous result [Chan, STOC´02], which required fast matrix multiplication and had an update time of O(m^{0.94}).  The new data structure is also simpler.Geometric connectivity asks to maintain a dynamic set of ngeometric objects, and query connectivity in their intersection graph.  (For instance, the intersection graph of balls describes connectivity in a network of sensors with bounded transmission radius.)Previously, nontrivial fully dynamic results were known onlyfor special cases like axis-parallel line segments and rectangles. We provide similarly improved update times, O~(n^{2/3}), for these special cases. Moreover, we show how to obtain sublinear update bounds for virtually all families of geometric objects which allow sublinear-time range queries. In particular, we obtain the first sublinear update time for arbitrary 2D line segments: O*(n^{9/10}); for d-dimensional simplices: O*(n^{1-1/d(2d+1)}); and for d-dimensional balls: O*(n^{1-1/(d+1)(2d+3)}).
  • Keywords
    "Joining processes","Heuristic algorithms","Data structures","Computer science","Computational geometry","Solid modeling","Sensor phenomena and characterization","Tree graphs","Computer networks","Turning"
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Foundations of Computer Science, 2008. FOCS ´08. IEEE 49th Annual IEEE Symposium on
  • ISSN
    0272-5428
  • Print_ISBN
    978-0-7695-3436-7
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/FOCS.2008.29
  • Filename
    4690944