Steiner ratio for hyperbolic surfaces. (Q863754): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 06:00, 10 December 2024
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English | Steiner ratio for hyperbolic surfaces. |
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Steiner ratio for hyperbolic surfaces. (English)
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7 February 2007
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Let \(M\) be a complete Riemannian manifold without boundary, \(P\) a finite set of points on \(M\). A shortest network interconnecting \(P\) is called a Steiner minimum tree, shortly \(\text{SMT}(P)\); it may have vertices which are not in \(P\) (``Steiner points''). A shortest tree with vertex set \(P\) is called a minimum spanning tree on \(P\), shortly \(\text{MST}(P)\). The Steiner ratio \(\rho=\rho(M)\) of \(M\) is given by the infimum (with respect to all finite point sets \(P\subset M\)) of the quotient ``total length of the edges in \(\text{SMT}(P)/\) total length of the edges in \(\text{MST}(P)\)''. It is well-known that \(\rho(M)\geq{1\over 2}\) [\textit{D.-Z. Du} and \textit{F. K. Hwang}, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 87, No. 23, 9464--9466 (1990; Zbl 0707.05018)]. The authors prove (Theorem 1): the Steiner ratio for a simply connected complete surface of negative constant curvature without boundary (``hyperbolic space'') is \({1\over 2}\) by considering a sequence of regular geodesic polygons in the Poincaré disk.
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Steiner ratio
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Steiner tree
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Riemannian geometry
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geodesic
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hyperbolic geometry
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Poincaré disk
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