
The Art Gallery Problem by Kellen Hatheway '19, Monday, February 4
Mon, February 4th, 2019
1:00 pm - 1:45 pm
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The Art Gallery Problem by Kellen Hatheway ’19, Monday, February 4, Mathematics Colloquium, 1 – 1:45 pm, Stetson Court Classroom 101.
Abstract: How many guards are needed to view the entire area of an art gallery? Using computational geometry we can represent the art gallery as a simple polygon where the guards are represented by a point within the polygon. A set of points, S, is said to guard a polygon if for all points, p, there exists some q in S such that the line between p and q does not leave the polygon. Chvatal’s Theorem gives us an upper bound for the minimum number of guards for a polygon with n vertices. The proof for this theorem involves triangulation and graph coloring to reach an upper bound of ⌊n/3⌋.
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