Paper ID: 2412.19706

Geometric Freeze-Tag Problem

Sharareh Alipour, Kajal Baghestani, Mahdis Mirzaei, Soroush Sahraei

We study the Freeze-Tag Problem (FTP), introduced by Arkin et al. (SODA'02), where the objective is to activate a group of n robots, starting from a single initially active robot. Robots are positioned in $\mathbb{R}^d$, and once activated, they move at a constant speed to wake up others. The goal is to minimize the time required to activate the last robot, known as the makespan. We establish new upper bounds for the makespan under the $l_1$ and $l_2$ norms in $\mathbb{R}^2$ and $\mathbb{R}^3$. Specifically, we improve the previous upper bound for $(\mathbb{R}^2, l_2)$ from $7.07r$ (Bonichon et al., DISC'24) to $5.064r$. For $(\mathbb{R}^3, l_1)$, we derive a makespan bound of $13r$, which translates to $22.52r$ for $(\mathbb{R}^3, l_2)$. Here, $r$ denotes the maximum distance of any robot from the initially active robot under the given norm. To our knowledge, these are the first makespan bounds for FTP in $\mathbb{R}^3$. Additionally, we show that the maximum makespan for $n$ robots is not necessarily achieved when robots are equally distributed along the boundary in $(\mathbb{R}^2, l_2)$. We further investigate FTP in $(\mathbb{R}^3, l_2)$ for specific configurations where robots lie on a boundary, providing insights into practical scenarios.

Submitted: Dec 27, 2024