6,416 research outputs found
Approximating subset -connectivity problems
A subset of terminals is -connected to a root in a
directed/undirected graph if has internally-disjoint -paths for
every ; is -connected in if is -connected to every
. We consider the {\sf Subset -Connectivity Augmentation} problem:
given a graph with edge/node-costs, node subset , and
a subgraph of such that is -connected in , find a
minimum-cost augmenting edge-set such that is
-connected in . The problem admits trivial ratio .
We consider the case and prove that for directed/undirected graphs and
edge/node-costs, a -approximation for {\sf Rooted Subset -Connectivity
Augmentation} implies the following ratios for {\sf Subset -Connectivity
Augmentation}: (i) ; (ii) , where
b=1 for undirected graphs and b=2 for directed graphs, and is the th
harmonic number. The best known values of on undirected graphs are
for edge-costs and for
node-costs; for directed graphs for both versions. Our results imply
that unless , {\sf Subset -Connectivity Augmentation} admits
the same ratios as the best known ones for the rooted version. This improves
the ratios in \cite{N-focs,L}
Maximum Edge-Disjoint Paths in -sums of Graphs
We consider the approximability of the maximum edge-disjoint paths problem
(MEDP) in undirected graphs, and in particular, the integrality gap of the
natural multicommodity flow based relaxation for it. The integrality gap is
known to be even for planar graphs due to a simple
topological obstruction and a major focus, following earlier work, has been
understanding the gap if some constant congestion is allowed.
In this context, it is natural to ask for which classes of graphs does a
constant-factor constant-congestion property hold. It is easy to deduce that
for given constant bounds on the approximation and congestion, the class of
"nice" graphs is nor-closed. Is the converse true? Does every proper
minor-closed family of graphs exhibit a constant factor, constant congestion
bound relative to the LP relaxation? We conjecture that the answer is yes.
One stumbling block has been that such bounds were not known for bounded
treewidth graphs (or even treewidth 3). In this paper we give a polytime
algorithm which takes a fractional routing solution in a graph of bounded
treewidth and is able to integrally route a constant fraction of the LP
solution's value. Note that we do not incur any edge congestion. Previously
this was not known even for series parallel graphs which have treewidth 2. The
algorithm is based on a more general argument that applies to -sums of
graphs in some graph family, as long as the graph family has a constant factor,
constant congestion bound. We then use this to show that such bounds hold for
the class of -sums of bounded genus graphs
Tree-width of hypergraphs and surface duality
In Graph Minors III, Robertson and Seymour write: "It seems that the
tree-width of a planar graph and the tree-width of its geometric dual are
approximately equal - indeed, we have convinced ourselves that they differ by
at most one". They never gave a proof of this. In this paper, we prove a
generalisation of this statement to embedding of hypergraphs on general
surfaces, and we prove that our bound is tight
Parameterized Complexity of Equitable Coloring
A graph on vertices is equitably -colorable if it is -colorable and
every color is used either or times.
Such a problem appears to be considerably harder than vertex coloring, being
even for cographs and interval graphs.
In this work, we prove that it is for block
graphs and for disjoint union of split graphs when parameterized by the number
of colors; and for -free interval graphs
when parameterized by treewidth, number of colors and maximum degree,
generalizing a result by Fellows et al. (2014) through a much simpler
reduction.
Using a previous result due to Dominique de Werra (1985), we establish a
dichotomy for the complexity of equitable coloring of chordal graphs based on
the size of the largest induced star.
Finally, we show that \textsc{equitable coloring} is when
parameterized by the treewidth of the complement graph
Approximating Source Location and Star Survivable Network Problems
In Source Location (SL) problems the goal is to select a mini-mum cost source
set such that the connectivity (or flow) from
to any node is at least the demand of . In many SL problems
if , namely, the demand of nodes selected to is
completely satisfied. In a node-connectivity variant suggested recently by
Fukunaga, every node gets a "bonus" if it is selected to
. Fukunaga showed that for undirected graphs one can achieve ratio for his variant, where is the maximum demand. We
improve this by achieving ratio \min\{p^*\lnk,k\}\cdot O(\ln (k/q^*)) for a
more general version with node capacities, where is
the maximum bonus and is the minimum capacity. In
particular, for the most natural case considered by Fukunaga, we
improve the ratio from to . We also get ratio
for the edge-connectivity version, for which no ratio that depends on only
was known before. To derive these results, we consider a particular case of the
Survivable Network (SN) problem when all edges of positive cost form a star. We
give ratio for this variant, improving over the best
ratio known for the general case of Chuzhoy and Khanna
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