The Squishy Grid Problem
July 30, 2025 Β· Declared Dead Β· π arXiv.org
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Authors
Zixi Cai, Kuowen Chen, Shengquan Du, Arnold Filtser, Seth Pettie, Daniel Skora
arXiv ID
2507.23105
Category
cs.CG: Computational Geometry
Cross-listed
cs.DM,
cs.DS,
math.CO,
math.PR
Citations
0
Venue
arXiv.org
Last Checked
3 months ago
Abstract
In this paper we consider the problem of approximating Euclidean distances by the infinite integer grid graph. Although the topology of the graph is fixed, we have control over the edge-weight assignment $w:E\to \mathbb{R}_{\ge 0}$, and hope to have grid distances be asymptotically isometric to Euclidean distances, that is, for all grid points $u,v$, $\mathrm{dist}_w(u,v) = (1\pm o(1))\|u-v\|_2$. We give three methods for solving this problem, each attractive in its own way. * Our first construction is based on an embedding of the recursive, non-periodic pinwheel tiling of Radin and Conway into the integer grid. Distances in the pinwheel graph are asymptotically isometric to Euclidean distances, but no explicit bound on the rate of convergence was known. We prove that the multiplicative distortion of the pinwheel graph is $(1+1/Ξ(\log^ΞΎ\log D))$, where $D$ is the Euclidean distance and $ΞΎ=Ξ(1)$. The pinwheel tiling approach is conceptually simple, but can be improved quantitatively. * Our second construction is based on a hierarchical arrangement of "highways." It is simple, achieving stretch $(1 + 1/Ξ(D^{1/9}))$, which converges doubly exponentially faster than the pinwheel tiling approach. * The first two methods are deterministic. An even simpler approach is to sample the edge weights independently from a common distribution $\mathscr{D}$. Whether there exists a distribution $\mathscr{D}^*$ that makes grid distances Euclidean, asymptotically and in expectation, is major open problem in the theory of first passage percolation. Previous experiments show that when $\mathscr{D}$ is a Fisher distribution, grid distances are within 1\% of Euclidean. We demonstrate experimentally that this level of accuracy can be achieved by a simple 2-point distribution that assigns weights 0.41 or 4.75 with probability 44\% and 56\%, respectively.
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