The Steiner ratio for five points (Q1179750): Difference between revisions
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English | The Steiner ratio for five points |
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The Steiner ratio for five points (English)
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27 June 1992
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A metric space \(M\) is considered. If \(P\) is a finite set of points of \(M\), then the Steiner minimal tree \(SMT(P)\) of \(P\) is the shortest connected network in \(M\) which contains all points of \(P\). The vertices of \(SMT(P)\) are points of \(P\) (regular points) and possibly also other points of \(M\) (Steiner points). The minimal spanning tree \(MST(P)\) of \(P\) is the shortest tree in \(M\) whose vertices are exactly all points of \(P\). Let \(L_ s(P)\) be the length (sum of lengths of edges) of \(SMT(P)\), let \(L_ m(P)\) be the length of \(MST(P)\). The Steiner ratio of \(M\) is \(\rho(M)=\inf\{L_ s(P)/L_ m(P)\mid P\subset M\}\). For the Euclidean plane E. N. Gilbert and H. O. Pollak have conjectured that \(L_ s(P)\geq(\sqrt 3/2)L_ m(P)\). For \(P\) having 5 points this was proved by D. Z. Du, E. Yao and F. K. Hwang. In this paper another proof is brought. The author writes: The present paper reproves the result for five points but, at the same time, it attempts to reduce the proof to the situation of many applications of some basic lemmas with, hopefully, a good prospect of generalizing to six or more points.
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Steiner ratio
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metric space
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Steiner minimal tree
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minimal spanning tree
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