140,096 research outputs found
Improved Distributed Algorithms for Exact Shortest Paths
Computing shortest paths is one of the central problems in the theory of
distributed computing. For the last few years, substantial progress has been
made on the approximate single source shortest paths problem, culminating in an
algorithm of Becker et al. [DISC'17] which deterministically computes
-approximate shortest paths in time, where
is the hop-diameter of the graph. Up to logarithmic factors, this time
complexity is optimal, matching the lower bound of Elkin [STOC'04].
The question of exact shortest paths however saw no algorithmic progress for
decades, until the recent breakthrough of Elkin [STOC'17], which established a
sublinear-time algorithm for exact single source shortest paths on undirected
graphs. Shortly after, Huang et al. [FOCS'17] provided improved algorithms for
exact all pairs shortest paths problem on directed graphs.
In this paper, we present a new single-source shortest path algorithm with
complexity . For polylogarithmic , this improves
on Elkin's bound and gets closer to the
lower bound of Elkin [STOC'04]. For larger values of
, we present an improved variant of our algorithm which achieves complexity
, and
thus compares favorably with Elkin's bound of in essentially the entire range of parameters. This
algorithm provides also a qualitative improvement, because it works for the
more challenging case of directed graphs (i.e., graphs where the two directions
of an edge can have different weights), constituting the first sublinear-time
algorithm for directed graphs. Our algorithm also extends to the case of exact
-source shortest paths...Comment: 26 page
An ETH-Tight Exact Algorithm for Euclidean TSP
We study exact algorithms for {\sc Euclidean TSP} in . In the
early 1990s algorithms with running time were presented for
the planar case, and some years later an algorithm with
running time was presented for any . Despite significant interest in
subexponential exact algorithms over the past decade, there has been no
progress on {\sc Euclidean TSP}, except for a lower bound stating that the
problem admits no algorithm unless ETH fails. Up to
constant factors in the exponent, we settle the complexity of {\sc Euclidean
TSP} by giving a algorithm and by showing that a
algorithm does not exist unless ETH fails.Comment: To appear in FOCS 201
Exact Inference Techniques for the Analysis of Bayesian Attack Graphs
Attack graphs are a powerful tool for security risk assessment by analysing
network vulnerabilities and the paths attackers can use to compromise network
resources. The uncertainty about the attacker's behaviour makes Bayesian
networks suitable to model attack graphs to perform static and dynamic
analysis. Previous approaches have focused on the formalization of attack
graphs into a Bayesian model rather than proposing mechanisms for their
analysis. In this paper we propose to use efficient algorithms to make exact
inference in Bayesian attack graphs, enabling the static and dynamic network
risk assessments. To support the validity of our approach we have performed an
extensive experimental evaluation on synthetic Bayesian attack graphs with
different topologies, showing the computational advantages in terms of time and
memory use of the proposed techniques when compared to existing approaches.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figure
Exact Distance Oracles for Planar Graphs
We present new and improved data structures that answer exact node-to-node
distance queries in planar graphs. Such data structures are also known as
distance oracles. For any directed planar graph on n nodes with non-negative
lengths we obtain the following:
* Given a desired space allocation , we show how to
construct in time a data structure of size that answers
distance queries in time per query.
As a consequence, we obtain an improvement over the fastest algorithm for
k-many distances in planar graphs whenever .
* We provide a linear-space exact distance oracle for planar graphs with
query time for any constant eps>0. This is the first such data
structure with provable sublinear query time.
* For edge lengths at least one, we provide an exact distance oracle of space
such that for any pair of nodes at distance D the query time is
. Comparable query performance had been observed
experimentally but has never been explained theoretically.
Our data structures are based on the following new tool: given a
non-self-crossing cycle C with nodes, we can preprocess G in
time to produce a data structure of size that can
answer the following queries in time: for a query node u, output
the distance from u to all the nodes of C. This data structure builds on and
extends a related data structure of Klein (SODA'05), which reports distances to
the boundary of a face, rather than a cycle.
The best distance oracles for planar graphs until the current work are due to
Cabello (SODA'06), Djidjev (WG'96), and Fakcharoenphol and Rao (FOCS'01). For
and space , we essentially improve the query
time from to .Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the 23rd ACM-SIAM Symposium on
Discrete Algorithms, SODA 201
On the probability of planarity of a random graph near the critical point
Consider the uniform random graph with vertices and edges.
Erd\H{o}s and R\'enyi (1960) conjectured that the limit
\lim_{n \to \infty} \Pr\{G(n,\textstyle{n\over 2}) is planar}} exists
and is a constant strictly between 0 and 1. \L uczak, Pittel and Wierman (1994)
proved this conjecture and Janson, \L uczak, Knuth and Pittel (1993) gave lower
and upper bounds for this probability.
In this paper we determine the exact probability of a random graph being
planar near the critical point . For each , we find an exact
analytic expression for
In particular, we obtain .
We extend these results to classes of graphs closed under taking minors. As
an example, we show that the probability of being
series-parallel converges to 0.98003.
For the sake of completeness and exposition we reprove in a concise way
several basic properties we need of a random graph near the critical point.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
Exact Algorithms for Maximum Independent Set
We show that the maximum independent set problem (MIS) on an -vertex graph
can be solved in time and polynomial space, which even is
faster than Robson's -time exponential-space algorithm
published in 1986. We also obtain improved algorithms for MIS in graphs with
maximum degree 6 and 7, which run in time of and
, respectively. Our algorithms are obtained by using fast
algorithms for MIS in low-degree graphs in a hierarchical way and making a
careful analyses on the structure of bounded-degree graphs
Quantum algorithms for subset finding
Recently, Ambainis gave an O(N^(2/3))-query quantum walk algorithm for
element distinctness, and more generally, an O(N^(L/(L+1)))-query algorithm for
finding L equal numbers. We point out that this algorithm actually solves a
much more general problem, the problem of finding a subset of size L that
satisfies any given property. We review the algorithm and give a considerably
simplified analysis of its query complexity. We present several applications,
including two algorithms for the problem of finding an L-clique in an N-vertex
graph. One of these algorithms uses O(N^(2L/(L+1))) edge queries, and the other
uses \tilde{O}(N^((5L-2)/(2L+4))), which is an improvement for L <= 5. The
latter algorithm generalizes a recent result of Magniez, Santha, and Szegedy,
who considered the case L=3 (finding a triangle). We also pose two open
problems regarding continuous time quantum walk and lower bounds.Comment: 7 pages; note added on related results in quant-ph/031013
Exact bounds for distributed graph colouring
We prove exact bounds on the time complexity of distributed graph colouring.
If we are given a directed path that is properly coloured with colours, by
prior work it is known that we can find a proper 3-colouring in communication rounds. We close the gap between upper and
lower bounds: we show that for infinitely many the time complexity is
precisely communication rounds.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure
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