
arXiv: 0803.3670
A unit cube in $k$ dimensions ($k$-cube) is defined as the the Cartesian product $R_1\times R_2\times...\times R_k$ where $R_i$(for $1\leq i\leq k$) is a closed interval of the form $[a_i,a_i+1]$ on the real line. A graph $G$ on $n$ nodes is said to be representable as the intersection of $k$-cubes (cube representation in $k$ dimensions) if each vertex of $G$ can be mapped to a $k$-cube such that two vertices are adjacent in $G$ if and only if their corresponding $k$-cubes have a non-empty intersection. The \emph{cubicity} of $G$ denoted as $\cubi(G)$ is the minimum $k$ for which $G$ can be represented as the intersection of $k$-cubes. We give an $O(bw\cdot n)$ algorithm to compute the cube representation of a general graph $G$ in $bw+1$ dimensions given a bandwidth ordering of the vertices of $G$, where $bw$ is the \emph{bandwidth} of $G$. As a consequence, we get $O(��)$ upper bounds on the cubicity of many well-known graph classes such as AT-free graphs, circular-arc graphs and co-comparability graphs which have $O(��)$ bandwidth. Thus we have: 1) $\cubi(G)\leq 3��-1$, if $G$ is an AT-free graph. 2) $\cubi(G)\leq 2��+1$, if $G$ is a circular-arc graph. 3) $\cubi(G)\leq 2��$, if $G$ is a co-comparability graph. Also for these graph classes, there are constant factor approximation algorithms for bandwidth computation that generate orderings of vertices with $O(��)$ width. We can thus generate the cube representation of such graphs in $O(��)$ dimensions in polynomial time.
9 pages, 0 figures
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Discrete Mathematics (cs.DM), Computer Science - Discrete Mathematics
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Discrete Mathematics (cs.DM), Computer Science - Discrete Mathematics
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