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Problem 23: Vertex $ \pi$-Floodlights

Statement
How many $ \pi$-floodlights are always sufficient to illuminate any polygon of n vertices, with at most one floodlight placed at each vertex? An $ \alpha$-floodlight is a light of aperture $ \alpha$. (We consider here "inward-facing" floodlights, whose defining halfspace lies inside the polygon, locally in the neighborhood of the vertex. Other models of the problem allow general orientations of floodlights or restricted orientations (e.g., "edge-aligned").)
Origin
Jorge Urrutia, perhaps first published in [Urr00].
Status/Conjectures
Open. Now known that the fraction of n that always suffices lies between 5/8 and 2/3.
Partial and Related Results
It was established in [ECOUX95] that for any $ \alpha$ < $ \pi$, there is a polygon that cannot be illuminated with an $ \alpha$-floodlight at each vertex. When $ \alpha$ = $ \pi$, n - 2 lights (trivially) suffice. So it is of interest (as noted in [Urr00]) to learn whether a fraction of n lights suffice for $ \pi$-floodlights. A (very) special case is that $ \lceil$n/2$ \rceil$ - 1 is a tight bound for "monotone mountains" [O'R97]. Tóth established [Tót01] that (roughly) (3/4)n suffice, in the case of general orientation floodlights (not necessarily inward-facing). A lower bound of Santos, that $ \lfloor$3(n - 1)/5$ \rfloor$ inward-facing floodlights are necessary (or $ \lfloor$2(n - 2)/5$ \rfloor$ generally oriented floodlights), stood for several years, but just recently (Jan. 2002) Urrutia constructed examples, based on stitching together copies of Fig. 1, that show that 5(k + 1)/(8k + 9) (inward-facing) floodlights are necessary for each k, thus improving the lower bound factor from 0.6 to 0.625. Also, Speckmann and Tóth [ST01b] showed that $ \lfloor$n/2$ \rfloor$ vertex $ \pi$-floodlights suffice for general orientations, while $ \lfloor$(2n - c)/3$ \rfloor$ suffice for inward-facing, edge-aligned orientations, where c is the number of convex vertices. In particular, this reduced the upper-bound fraction below 1.
Figure 1: A polygon of 9 vertices that needs 5 vertex $ \pi$-lights.
\includegraphics[width=0.4\linewidth]{p5over8.eps}
Appearances
[MO01]
Categories
art galleries; visibility
Entry Revision History
J. Mitchell, 24 Jan 2001; J. O'Rourke, 2 Aug. 2001; 29 Aug. 2001; 23 Jan. 2002; 30 Sep. 2007.

Bibliography

ECOUX95
V. Estivill-Castro, Joseph O'Rourke, J. Urrutia, and D. Xu.
Illumination of polygons with vertex floodlights.
Inform. Process. Lett., 56:9-13, 1995.

MO01
J. S. B. Mitchell and Joseph O'Rourke.
Computational geometry column 42.
Internat. J. Comput. Geom. Appl., 11(5):573-582, 2001.
Also in SIGACT News 32(3):63-72 (2001), Issue 120.

O'R97
Joseph O'Rourke.
Vertex $ \pi$-lights for monotone mountains.
In Proc. 9th Canad. Conf. Comput. Geom., pages 1-5, 1997.

ST01b
Bettina Speckmann and Csaba D. Tóth.
Vertex $ \pi$-guards in simple polygons.
Technical report, ETH Zürich, December 2001.

Tót01
Csaba D. Tóth.
Illuminating polygons with vertex $ \pi$-floodlights.
In V. N. Alexandrov et al., editors, Proc. Int. Conf. on Comput. Sci., volume 2073 of Lecture Notes Comput. Sci., pages 772-781. Springer-Verlag, 2001.

Urr00
Jorge Urrutia.
Art gallery and illumination problems.
In Jörg-Rüdiger Sack and Jorge Urrutia, editors, Handbook of Computational Geometry, pages 973-1027. North-Holland, 2000.


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Next: Problem 24: Polygonal Curve Up: The Open Problems Project Previous: Problem 22: Minimum-Link Path
The Open Problems Project - July 24, 2008