Truly Subquadratic Time Algorithms for Diameter and Related Problems in Graphs of Bounded VC-dimension

October 18, 2025 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› IEEE Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science

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Authors Timothy M. Chan, Hsien-Chih Chang, Jie Gao, SΓ‘ndor Kisfaludi-Bak, Hung Le, Da Wei Zheng arXiv ID 2510.16346 Category cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms Cross-listed cs.CG Citations 3 Venue IEEE Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
We give the first truly subquadratic time algorithm, with $O^*(n^{2-1/18})$ running time, for computing the diameter of an $n$-vertex unit-disk graph, resolving a central open problem in the literature. Our result is obtained as an instance of a general framework, applicable to different graph families and distance problems. Surprisingly, our framework completely bypasses sublinear separators (or $r$-divisions) which were used in all previous algorithms. Instead, we use low-diameter decompositions in their most elementary form. We also exploit bounded VC-dimension of set systems associated with the input graph, as well as new ideas on geometric data structures. Among the numerous applications of the general framework, we obtain: 1. An $\tilde{O}(mn^{1-1/(2d)})$ time algorithm for computing the diameter of $m$-edge sparse unweighted graphs with constant VC-dimension $d$. The previously known algorithms by Ducoffe, Habib, and Viennot [SODA 2019] and Duraj, Konieczny, and PotΘ©pa [ESA 2024] are truly subquadratic only when the diameter is a small polynomial. Our result thus generalizes truly subquadratic time algorithms known for planar and minor-free graphs (in fact, it slightly improves the previous time bound for minor-free graphs). 2. An $\tilde{O}(n^{2-1/12})$ time algorithm for computing the diameter of intersection graphs of axis-aligned squares with arbitrary size. The best-known algorithm by Duraj, Konieczny, and PotΘ©pa [ESA 2024] only works for unit squares and is only truly subquadratic in the low-diameter regime. 3. The first algorithms with truly subquadratic complexity for other distance-related problems, including all-vertex eccentricities, Wiener index, and exact distance oracles. (... truncated to meet the arXiv abstract requirement.)
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