Covering the Euclidean Plane by a Pair of Trees
Hung Le, Lazar Milenkovi\'c, Shay Solomon, Tianyi Zhang

TL;DR
This paper proves that any set of points in the Euclidean plane can be covered by just two trees with a constant stretch, providing a new simple construction that improves upon previous bounds and has broad applications.
Contribution
The authors introduce a simple Steiner construction that achieves a constant stretch cover with two trees for Euclidean plane point sets, resolving a long-standing open problem.
Findings
Achieves a stretch of rom the Steiner construction.
Provides a tight analysis of the actor stretch.
Ensures the maximum degree of the construction is bounded by a constant.
Abstract
A {-stretch tree cover} of a metric space , for a parameter , is a collection of trees such that every pair of points has a -stretch path in one of the trees. Tree covers provide an important sketching tool that has found various applications over the years. The celebrated {Dumbbell Theorem} by Arya et al. [STOC'95] states that any set of points in the Euclidean plane admits a -stretch tree cover with trees. This result extends to any (constant) dimension and was also generalized for arbitrary doubling metrics by Bartal et al. [ICALP'19]. Although the number of trees provided by the Dumbbell Theorem is constant, this constant is not small, even for a stretch significantly larger than . At the other extreme, any single tree on the vertices of a regular -polygon must incur a stretch of . Using known…
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