Art gallery problem with rook and queen vision

10/25/2018
by   Hannah Alpert, et al.
0

How many chess rooks or queens does it take to guard all the squares of a given polyomino, the union of square tiles from a square grid? This question is a version of the art gallery problem in which the guards can "see" whichever squares the rook or queen attacks. We show that floor(n/2) rooks or floor(n/3) queens are sufficient and sometimes necessary to guard a polyomino with n tiles. We also prove that finding the minimum number of rooks or the minimum number of queens needed to guard a polyomino is NP-hard. These results also apply to d-dimensional rooks and queens on d-dimensional polycubes. We also use bipartite matching theorems to describe sets of non-attacking rooks on polyominoes.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
10/25/2018

Art Gallery Problem with Rook Vision

We introduce rook visibility, which is a new model of visibility for the...
research
08/30/2022

Approximation Algorithm for Minimum p Union Under a Geometric Setting

In a minimum p union problem (MinpU), given a hypergraph G=(V,E) and an ...
research
05/25/2022

Square roots of nearly planar graphs

We prove that it is NP-hard to decide whether a graph is the square of a...
research
07/10/2022

APX-Hardness of the Minimum Vision Points Problem

Placing a minimum number of guards on a given watchman route in a polygo...
research
08/01/2018

Exploration of Finite 2D Square Grid by a Metamorphic Robotic System

We consider exploration of finite 2D square grid by a metamorphic roboti...
research
10/27/2022

Generalizing the German Tank Problem

The German Tank Problem dates back to World War II when the Allies used ...
research
11/30/2021

Search by a Metamorphic Robotic System in a Finite 3D Cubic Grid

We consider search in a finite 3D cubic grid by a metamorphic robotic sy...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset