On the Queue Number of Planar Graphs
A k-queue layout is a special type of a linear layout, in which the linear order avoids (k+1)-rainbows, i.e., k+1 independent edges that pairwise form a nested pair. The optimization goal is to determine the queue number of a graph, i.e., the minimum value of k for which a k-queue layout is feasible. Recently, Dujmović et al. [J. ACM, 67(4), 22:1-38, 2020] showed that the queue number of planar graphs is at most 49, thus settling in the positive a long-standing conjecture by Heath, Leighton and Rosenberg. To achieve this breakthrough result, their approach involves three different techniques: (i) an algorithm to obtain straight-line drawings of outerplanar graphs, in which the y-distance of any two adjacent vertices is 1 or 2, (ii) an algorithm to obtain 5-queue layouts of planar 3-trees, and (iii) a decomposition of a planar graph into so-called tripods. In this work, we push further each of these techniques to obtain the first non-trivial improvement on the upper bound from 49 to 42.
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