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Haidong Wu

Haidong Wu contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Solving Minimal Problems Without Matrix Inversion Using FFT-Based Interpolation

Estimating camera geometry typically involves solving minimal problems formulated as systems of multivariate polynomial equations, which often pose computational challenges when using existing Gröbner-basis or resultant-based methods due to matrix inversion needed in the online solver. Here we propose a sampling-based, matrix inversion-free method that constructs the solvers using sparse hidden-variable resultants. The determinant polynomial in the hidden variable is efficiently reconstructed via inverse fast Fourier transform interpolation from sampled evaluations, avoiding symbolic expansion. Solving this polynomial yields the hidden variable, and the remaining unknowns are recovered by identifying rank-1 deficient submatrices and applying Cramer's rule. A greatest common divisor-based criterion ensures robust submatrix identification under noise. Experiments on diverse minimal problems demonstrate that the proposed solver achieves strong numerical stability and competitive runtime, particularly for small-scale problems, providing a practical alternative to traditional Gröbner-basis and resultant-based solvers.

preprint2022arXiv

Bonds intersecting long paths in $k$-connected graphs

A well-known question of Gallai (1966) asked whether there is a vertex which passes through all longest paths of a connected graph. Although this has been verified for some special classes of graphs such as outerplanar graphs, circular arc graphs, and series-parallel graphs, the answer is negative for general graphs. In this paper, we prove among other results that if we replace the vertex by a bond, then the answer is affirmative. A bond of a graph is a minimal nonempty edge-cut. In particular, in any 2-connected graph, the set of all edges incident to a vertex is a bond, called a vertex-bond. Clearly, for a 2-connected graph, a path passes through a vertex $v$ if and only if it meets the vertex-bond with respect to $v$. Therefore, a very natural approach to Gallai's question is to study whether there is a bond meeting all longest paths. Let $p$ denote the length of a longest path of connected graphs. We show that for any 2-connected graph, there is a bond meeting all paths of length at least $p-1$. We then prove that for any 3-connected graph, there is a bond meeting all paths of length at least $p-2$. For a $k$-connected graph $(k\ge3)$, we show that there is a bond meeting all paths of length at least $p-t+1$, where $t=\Big\lfloor\sqrt{\frac{k-2}{2}}\Big\rfloor$ if $p$ is even and $t=\Big\lceil\sqrt{\frac{k-2}{2}}\Big\rceil$ if $p$ is odd. Our results provide analogs of the corresponding results of P. Wu and S. McGuinness [Bonds intersecting cycles in a graph, Combinatorica 25 (4) (2005), 439-450] also.