Timothy M. Chan, Yakov Nekrich, S. Rahul, Konstantinos Tsakalidis
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Orthogonal Point Location and Rectangle Stabbing Queries in 3-d
In this work, we present a collection of new results on two fundamental problems in geometric data structures: orthogonal point location and rectangle stabbing.
-We give the first linear-space data structure that supports 3-d point location queries on $n$ disjoint axis-aligned boxes with optimal $O\left( \log n\right)$ query time in the (arithmetic) pointer machine model. This improves the previous $O\left( \log^{3/2} n \right)$ bound of Rahul [SODA 2015]. We similarly obtain the first linear-space data structure in the I/O model with optimal query cost, and also the first linear-space data structure in the word RAM model with sub-logarithmic query time.
-We give the first linear-space data structure that supports 3-d $4$-sided and $5$-sided rectangle stabbing queries in optimal $O(\log_wn+k)$ time in the word RAM model. We similarly obtain the first optimal data structure for the closely related problem of 2-d top-$k$ rectangle stabbing in the word RAM model, and also improved results for 3-d 6-sided rectangle stabbing.
For point location, our solution is simpler than previous methods, and is based on an interesting variant of the van Emde Boas recursion, applied in a round-robin fashion over the dimensions, combined with bit-packing techniques. For rectangle stabbing, our solution is a variant of Alstrup, Brodal, and Rauhe's grid-based recursive technique (FOCS 2000), combined with a number of new ideas.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Computational Geometry & Applications (IJCGA) is a quarterly journal devoted to the field of computational geometry within the framework of design and analysis of algorithms.
Emphasis is placed on the computational aspects of geometric problems that arise in various fields of science and engineering including computer-aided geometry design (CAGD), computer graphics, constructive solid geometry (CSG), operations research, pattern recognition, robotics, solid modelling, VLSI routing/layout, and others. Research contributions ranging from theoretical results in algorithm design — sequential or parallel, probabilistic or randomized algorithms — to applications in the above-mentioned areas are welcome. Research findings or experiences in the implementations of geometric algorithms, such as numerical stability, and papers with a geometric flavour related to algorithms or the application areas of computational geometry are also welcome.