Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4609138 Journal of Complexity 2006 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

We investigate the computational complexity of finding the minimum-area circumscribed rectangle of a given two-dimensional domain. We study this problem in the polynomial-time complexity theory of real functions based on the oracle Turing machine model. We show that a bounded domain S with a polynomial-time computable Jordan curve Γ as the boundary may not have a computable minimum-area circumscribed rectangle. We also show that the problem of finding the minimum area of a circumscribed rectangle of a polynomial-time computable Jordan curve Γ is equivalent to a discrete -complete problem. The related problem of finding the circumscribed squares of a Jordan curve Γ is also studied. We show that for any polynomial-time computable Jordan curve Γ, there must exist at least one computable circumscribed square (not necessarily of the minimum area), but this square may have arbitrarily high complexity.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Analysis