Layout of Graphs with Bounded Tree-Width
Vida Dujmovic, Pat Morin, David R. Wood

TL;DR
This paper establishes a deep connection between queue layouts, tree-width, and three-dimensional graph drawings, proving that graphs with bounded tree-width have efficient 3D representations and resolving longstanding open problems.
Contribution
It proves queue-number is bounded by tree-width, links 3D drawing volume to queue-number for minor-closed families, and shows bounded tree-width graphs have linear-volume 3D drawings.
Findings
Queue-number is bounded by tree-width.
Graphs with bounded tree-width have O(n) volume 3D drawings.
Resolved an open problem on queue-number and disproved a conjecture.
Abstract
A \emph{queue layout} of a graph consists of a total order of the vertices, and a partition of the edges into \emph{queues}, such that no two edges in the same queue are nested. The minimum number of queues in a queue layout of a graph is its \emph{queue-number}. A \emph{three-dimensional (straight-line grid) drawing} of a graph represents the vertices by points in and the edges by non-crossing line-segments. This paper contributes three main results: (1) It is proved that the minimum volume of a certain type of three-dimensional drawing of a graph is closely related to the queue-number of . In particular, if is an -vertex member of a proper minor-closed family of graphs (such as a planar graph), then has a drawing if and only if has O(1) queue-number. (2) It is proved that queue-number is bounded by tree-width, thus…
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