9,532 research outputs found

    Matching Is as Easy as the Decision Problem, in the NC Model

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    Is matching in NC, i.e., is there a deterministic fast parallel algorithm for it? This has been an outstanding open question in TCS for over three decades, ever since the discovery of randomized NC matching algorithms [KUW85, MVV87]. Over the last five years, the theoretical computer science community has launched a relentless attack on this question, leading to the discovery of several powerful ideas. We give what appears to be the culmination of this line of work: An NC algorithm for finding a minimum-weight perfect matching in a general graph with polynomially bounded edge weights, provided it is given an oracle for the decision problem. Consequently, for settling the main open problem, it suffices to obtain an NC algorithm for the decision problem. We believe this new fact has qualitatively changed the nature of this open problem. All known efficient matching algorithms for general graphs follow one of two approaches: given by Edmonds [Edm65] and Lov\'asz [Lov79]. Our oracle-based algorithm follows a new approach and uses many of the ideas discovered in the last five years. The difficulty of obtaining an NC perfect matching algorithm led researchers to study matching vis-a-vis clever relaxations of the class NC. In this vein, recently Goldwasser and Grossman [GG15] gave a pseudo-deterministic RNC algorithm for finding a perfect matching in a bipartite graph, i.e., an RNC algorithm with the additional requirement that on the same graph, it should return the same (i.e., unique) perfect matching for almost all choices of random bits. A corollary of our reduction is an analogous algorithm for general graphs.Comment: Appeared in ITCS 202

    Embedding large subgraphs into dense graphs

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    What conditions ensure that a graph G contains some given spanning subgraph H? The most famous examples of results of this kind are probably Dirac's theorem on Hamilton cycles and Tutte's theorem on perfect matchings. Perfect matchings are generalized by perfect F-packings, where instead of covering all the vertices of G by disjoint edges, we want to cover G by disjoint copies of a (small) graph F. It is unlikely that there is a characterization of all graphs G which contain a perfect F-packing, so as in the case of Dirac's theorem it makes sense to study conditions on the minimum degree of G which guarantee a perfect F-packing. The Regularity lemma of Szemeredi and the Blow-up lemma of Komlos, Sarkozy and Szemeredi have proved to be powerful tools in attacking such problems and quite recently, several long-standing problems and conjectures in the area have been solved using these. In this survey, we give an outline of recent progress (with our main emphasis on F-packings, Hamiltonicity problems and tree embeddings) and describe some of the methods involved

    Local colourings and monochromatic partitions in complete bipartite graphs

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    We show that for any 22-local colouring of the edges of the balanced complete bipartite graph Kn,nK_{n,n}, its vertices can be covered with at most~33 disjoint monochromatic paths. And, we can cover almost all vertices of any complete or balanced complete bipartite rr-locally coloured graph with O(r2)O(r^2) disjoint monochromatic cycles.\\ We also determine the 22-local bipartite Ramsey number of a path almost exactly: Every 22-local colouring of the edges of Kn,nK_{n,n} contains a monochromatic path on nn vertices.Comment: 18 page

    On globally sparse Ramsey graphs

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    We say that a graph GG has the Ramsey property w.r.t.\ some graph FF and some integer r2r\geq 2, or GG is (F,r)(F,r)-Ramsey for short, if any rr-coloring of the edges of GG contains a monochromatic copy of FF. R{\"o}dl and Ruci{\'n}ski asked how globally sparse (F,r)(F,r)-Ramsey graphs GG can possibly be, where the density of GG is measured by the subgraph HGH\subseteq G with the highest average degree. So far, this so-called Ramsey density is known only for cliques and some trivial graphs FF. In this work we determine the Ramsey density up to some small error terms for several cases when FF is a complete bipartite graph, a cycle or a path, and r2r\geq 2 colors are available
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