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New bounds on the maximum number of edges in $k$-quasi-planar graphs

Published 2 Sep 2013 in math.CO and cs.CG | (1309.0395v3)

Abstract: A topological graph is $k$-quasi-planar if it does not contain $k$ pairwise crossing edges. A 20-year-old conjecture asserts that for every fixed $k$, the maximum number of edges in a $k$-quasi-planar graph on $n$ vertices is $O(n)$. Fox and Pach showed that every $k$-quasi-planar graph with $n$ vertices has at most $n(\log n){O(\log k)}$ edges. We improve this upper bound to $2{\alpha(n)c}n\log n$, where $\alpha(n)$ denotes the inverse Ackermann function and $c$ depends only on $k$, for $k$-quasi-planar graphs in which any two edges intersect in a bounded number of points. We also show that every $k$-quasi-planar graph with $n$ vertices in which any two edges have at most one point in common has at most $O(n\log n)$ edges. This improves the previously known upper bound of $2{\alpha(n)c}n\log n$ obtained by Fox, Pach, and Suk.

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