Revisiting Random Points: Combinatorial Complexity and Algorithms (2208.03829v2)
Abstract: Consider a set $P$ of $n$ points picked uniformly and independently from $[0,1]d$ for a constant dimension $d$ -- such a point set is extremely well behaved in many aspects. For example, for a fixed $r \in [0,1]$, we prove a new concentration result on the number of pairs of points of $P$ at a distance at most $r$ -- we show that this number lies in an interval that contains only $O(n \log n)$ numbers. We also present simple linear time algorithms to construct the Delaunay triangulation, Euclidean MST, and the convex hull of the points of $P$. The MST algorithm is an interesting divide-and-conquer algorithm which might be of independent interest. We also provide a new proof that the expected complexity of the Delaunay triangulation of $P$ is linear -- the new proof is simpler and more direct, and might be of independent interest. Finally, we present a simple $\tilde{O}(n{4/3})$ time algorithm for the distance selection problem for $d=2$.