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The Complexity of Recognizing Geometric Hypergraphs

Published 27 Feb 2023 in cs.CG | (2302.13597v2)

Abstract: As set systems, hypergraphs are omnipresent and have various representations ranging from Euler and Venn diagrams to contact representations. In a geometric representation of a hypergraph $H=(V,E)$, each vertex $v\in V$ is associated with a point $p_v\in \mathbb{R}d$ and each hyperedge $e\in E$ is associated with a connected set $s_e\subset \mathbb{R}d$ such that ${p_v\mid v\in V}\cap s_e={p_v\mid v\in e}$ for all $e\in E$. We say that a given hypergraph $H$ is representable by some (infinite) family $F$ of sets in $\mathbb{R}d$, if there exist $P\subset \mathbb{R}d$ and $S \subseteq F$ such that $(P,S)$ is a geometric representation of $H$. For a family F, we define RECOGNITION(F) as the problem to determine if a given hypergraph is representable by F. It is known that the RECOGNITION problem is $\exists\mathbb{R}$-hard for halfspaces in $\mathbb{R}d$. We study the families of translates of balls and ellipsoids in $\mathbb{R}d$, as well as of other convex sets, and show that their RECOGNITION problems are also $\exists\mathbb{R}$-complete. This means that these recognition problems are equivalent to deciding whether a multivariate system of polynomial equations with integer coefficients has a real solution.

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