Amortized Rotation Cost in AVL Trees
Abstract
An AVL tree is the original type of balanced binary search tree. An insertion in an n-node AVL tree takes at most two rotations, but a deletion in an n-node AVL tree can take ( n). A natural question is whether deletions can take many rotations not only in the worst case but in the amortized case as well. A sequence of n successive deletions in an n-node tree takes O(n) rotations, but what happens when insertions are intermixed with deletions? Heaupler, Sen, and Tarjan conjectured that alternating insertions and deletions in an n-node AVL tree can cause each deletion to do ( n) rotations, but they provided no construction to justify their claim. We provide such a construction: we show that, for infinitely many n, there is a set E of expensive n-node AVL trees with the property that, given any tree in E, deleting a certain leaf and then reinserting it produces a tree in E, with the deletion having done ( n) rotations. One can do an arbitrary number of such expensive deletion-insertion pairs. The difficulty in obtaining such a construction is that in general the tree produced by an expensive deletion-insertion pair is not the original tree. Indeed, if the trees in E have even height k, 2k/2 deletion-insertion pairs are required to reproduce the original tree.
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