Covering Polygons is Even Harder

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

Covering Polygons is Even Harder. / Abrahamsen, Mikkel.

2021 IEEE 62nd Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS). IEEE, 2022. p. 375-386.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Abrahamsen, M 2022, Covering Polygons is Even Harder. in 2021 IEEE 62nd Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS). IEEE, pp. 375-386, 2021 IEEE 62nd Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS), Denver, United States, 07/02/2022. https://doi.org/10.1109/FOCS52979.2021.00045

APA

Abrahamsen, M. (2022). Covering Polygons is Even Harder. In 2021 IEEE 62nd Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS) (pp. 375-386). IEEE. https://doi.org/10.1109/FOCS52979.2021.00045

Vancouver

Abrahamsen M. Covering Polygons is Even Harder. In 2021 IEEE 62nd Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS). IEEE. 2022. p. 375-386 https://doi.org/10.1109/FOCS52979.2021.00045

Author

Abrahamsen, Mikkel. / Covering Polygons is Even Harder. 2021 IEEE 62nd Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS). IEEE, 2022. pp. 375-386

Bibtex

@inproceedings{ee4560401c2b4b35a0e5361d4e94344d,
title = "Covering Polygons is Even Harder",
abstract = "In the Minimum Convex Cover (MCC) problem, we are given a simple polygon P and an integer k , and the question is if there exist k convex polygons whose union is P . It is known that MCC is NP-hard [Culberson & Reckhow: Covering polygons is hard, FOCS 1988/Journal of Algorithms 1994] and in ∃R [O'Rourke: The complexity of computing minimum convex covers for polygons, Allerton 1982]. We prove that MCC is ∃R -hard, and the problem is thus ∃R -complete. In other words, the problem is equivalent to deciding whether a system of polynomial equations and inequalities with integer coefficients has a real solution. If a cover for our constructed polygon exists, then so does a cover consisting entirely of triangles. As a byproduct, we therefore also establish that it is ∃R -complete to decide whether k triangles cover a given polygon. The issue that it was not known if finding a minimum cover is in N P has repeatedly been raised in the literature, and it was mentioned as a “long-standing open question” already in 2001 [Eidenbenz & Widmayer: An approximation algorithm for minimum convex cover with logarithmic performance guarantee, ESA 2001/SIAM Journal on Computing 2003]. We prove that assuming the widespread belief that NP≠∃R , the problem is not in N P. An implication of the result is that many natural approaches to finding small covers are bound to give suboptimal solutions in some cases, since irrational coordinates of arbitrarily high algebraic degree can be needed for the corners of the pieces in an optimal solution.",
author = "Mikkel Abrahamsen",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1109/FOCS52979.2021.00045",
language = "English",
pages = "375--386",
booktitle = "2021 IEEE 62nd Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS)",
publisher = "IEEE",
note = "2021 IEEE 62nd Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS) ; Conference date: 07-02-2022 Through 10-02-2022",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Covering Polygons is Even Harder

AU - Abrahamsen, Mikkel

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - In the Minimum Convex Cover (MCC) problem, we are given a simple polygon P and an integer k , and the question is if there exist k convex polygons whose union is P . It is known that MCC is NP-hard [Culberson & Reckhow: Covering polygons is hard, FOCS 1988/Journal of Algorithms 1994] and in ∃R [O'Rourke: The complexity of computing minimum convex covers for polygons, Allerton 1982]. We prove that MCC is ∃R -hard, and the problem is thus ∃R -complete. In other words, the problem is equivalent to deciding whether a system of polynomial equations and inequalities with integer coefficients has a real solution. If a cover for our constructed polygon exists, then so does a cover consisting entirely of triangles. As a byproduct, we therefore also establish that it is ∃R -complete to decide whether k triangles cover a given polygon. The issue that it was not known if finding a minimum cover is in N P has repeatedly been raised in the literature, and it was mentioned as a “long-standing open question” already in 2001 [Eidenbenz & Widmayer: An approximation algorithm for minimum convex cover with logarithmic performance guarantee, ESA 2001/SIAM Journal on Computing 2003]. We prove that assuming the widespread belief that NP≠∃R , the problem is not in N P. An implication of the result is that many natural approaches to finding small covers are bound to give suboptimal solutions in some cases, since irrational coordinates of arbitrarily high algebraic degree can be needed for the corners of the pieces in an optimal solution.

AB - In the Minimum Convex Cover (MCC) problem, we are given a simple polygon P and an integer k , and the question is if there exist k convex polygons whose union is P . It is known that MCC is NP-hard [Culberson & Reckhow: Covering polygons is hard, FOCS 1988/Journal of Algorithms 1994] and in ∃R [O'Rourke: The complexity of computing minimum convex covers for polygons, Allerton 1982]. We prove that MCC is ∃R -hard, and the problem is thus ∃R -complete. In other words, the problem is equivalent to deciding whether a system of polynomial equations and inequalities with integer coefficients has a real solution. If a cover for our constructed polygon exists, then so does a cover consisting entirely of triangles. As a byproduct, we therefore also establish that it is ∃R -complete to decide whether k triangles cover a given polygon. The issue that it was not known if finding a minimum cover is in N P has repeatedly been raised in the literature, and it was mentioned as a “long-standing open question” already in 2001 [Eidenbenz & Widmayer: An approximation algorithm for minimum convex cover with logarithmic performance guarantee, ESA 2001/SIAM Journal on Computing 2003]. We prove that assuming the widespread belief that NP≠∃R , the problem is not in N P. An implication of the result is that many natural approaches to finding small covers are bound to give suboptimal solutions in some cases, since irrational coordinates of arbitrarily high algebraic degree can be needed for the corners of the pieces in an optimal solution.

U2 - 10.1109/FOCS52979.2021.00045

DO - 10.1109/FOCS52979.2021.00045

M3 - Article in proceedings

SP - 375

EP - 386

BT - 2021 IEEE 62nd Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS)

PB - IEEE

T2 - 2021 IEEE 62nd Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS)

Y2 - 7 February 2022 through 10 February 2022

ER -

ID: 301370797