Product Structure and Treewidth of Hyperbolic Uniform Disk Graphs
This addresses structural graph theory problems for hyperbolic geometry models, with implications for separator and treewidth questions in computational geometry.
The paper tackles the problem of whether hyperbolic uniform disk graphs (HUDGs) with constant clique number admit product structure, showing they do not, in contrast to Euclidean unit disk graphs, and complements this by proving product structure exists for sub-constant radius cases.
Hyperbolic uniform disk graphs (HUDGs) are intersection graphs of disks with some radius $r$ in the hyperbolic plane, where $r$ may be constant or depend on the number of vertices in a family of HUDGs. We show that HUDGs with constant clique number do not admit \emph{product structure}, i.e., that there is no constant $c$ such that every such graph is a subgraph of $H \boxtimes P$ for some graph $H$ of treewidth at most $c$. This justifies that HUDGs are described as not having a grid-like structure in the literature, and is in contrast to unit disk graphs in the Euclidean plane, whose grid-like structure is evident from the fact that they are subgraphs of the strong product of two paths and a clique of constant size [DvoÅák et al., '21, MATRIX Annals]. By allowing $H$ to be any graph of constant treewidth instead of a path-like graph, we reject the possibility of a grid-like structure not merely by the maximum degree (which is unbounded for HUDGs) but due to their global structure. We complement this by showing that for every (sub-)constant $r$, HUDGs admit product structure, whereas the typical hyperbolic behavior is observed if $r$ grows with the number of vertices. Our proof involves a family of $n$-vertex HUDGs with radius $\log n$ that has bounded clique number but unbounded treewidth, and one for which the ratio of treewidth and clique number is $\log n / \log \log n$. Up to a $\log \log n$ factor, this negatively answers a question raised by Bläsius et al. [SoCG '25] asking whether balanced separators of HUDGs with radius $\log n$ can be covered by less than $\log n$ cliques. Our results also imply that the local and layered tree-independence number of HUDGs are both unbounded, answering an open question of Dallard et al. [arXiv '25].