478 research outputs found

    From Electrical Power Flows to Unsplittabe Flows: A QPTAS for OPF with Discrete Demands in Line Distribution Networks

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    The {\it AC Optimal Power Flow} (OPF) problem is a fundamental problem in power systems engineering which has been known for decades. It is a notoriously hard problem due mainly to two reasons: (1) non-convexity of the power flow constraints and (2) the (possible) existence of discrete power injection constraints. Recently, sufficient conditions were provided for certain convex relaxations of OPF to be exact in the continuous case, thus allowing one to partially address the issue of non-convexity. In this paper we make a first step towards addressing the combinatorial issue. Namely, by establishing a connection to the well-known {\it unsplittable flow problem} (UFP), we are able to generalize known techniques for the latter problem to provide approximation algorithms for OPF with discrete demands. As an application, we give a quasi-polynomial time approximation scheme for OPF in line networks under some mild assumptions and a single generation source. We believe that this connection can be further leveraged to obtain approximation algorithms for more general settings, such as multiple generation sources and tree networks

    Cluster Before You Hallucinate: Approximating Node-Capacitated Network Design and Energy Efficient Routing

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    We consider circuit routing with an objective of minimizing energy, in a network of routers that are speed scalable and that may be shutdown when idle. We consider both multicast routing and unicast routing. It is known that this energy minimization problem can be reduced to a capacitated flow network design problem, where vertices have a common capacity but arbitrary costs, and the goal is to choose a minimum cost collection of vertices whose induced subgraph will support the specified flow requirements. For the multicast (single-sink) capacitated design problem we give a polynomial-time algorithm that is O(log^3n)-approximate with O(log^4 n) congestion. This translates back to a O(log ^(4{\alpha}+3) n)-approximation for the multicast energy-minimization routing problem, where {\alpha} is the polynomial exponent in the dynamic power used by a router. For the unicast (multicommodity) capacitated design problem we give a polynomial-time algorithm that is O(log^5 n)-approximate with O(log^12 n) congestion, which translates back to a O(log^(12{\alpha}+5) n)-approximation for the unicast energy-minimization routing problem.Comment: 22 pages (full version of STOC 2014 paper

    A Constant Factor Approximation Algorithm for Unsplittable Flow on Paths

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    In the unsplittable flow problem on a path, we are given a capacitated path PP and nn tasks, each task having a demand, a profit, and start and end vertices. The goal is to compute a maximum profit set of tasks, such that for each edge ee of PP, the total demand of selected tasks that use ee does not exceed the capacity of ee. This is a well-studied problem that has been studied under alternative names, such as resource allocation, bandwidth allocation, resource constrained scheduling, temporal knapsack and interval packing. We present a polynomial time constant-factor approximation algorithm for this problem. This improves on the previous best known approximation ratio of O(logn)O(\log n). The approximation ratio of our algorithm is 7+ϵ7+\epsilon for any ϵ>0\epsilon>0. We introduce several novel algorithmic techniques, which might be of independent interest: a framework which reduces the problem to instances with a bounded range of capacities, and a new geometrically inspired dynamic program which solves a special case of the maximum weight independent set of rectangles problem to optimality. In the setting of resource augmentation, wherein the capacities can be slightly violated, we give a (2+ϵ)(2+\epsilon)-approximation algorithm. In addition, we show that the problem is strongly NP-hard even if all edge capacities are equal and all demands are either~1,~2, or~3.Comment: 37 pages, 5 figures Version 2 contains the same results as version 1, but the presentation has been greatly revised and improved. References have been adde
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