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Zero-one IP problems: Polyhedral descriptions & cutting plane procedures
A systematic way for tightening an IP formulation is by employing classes of linear inequalities that define facets of the convex hull of the feasible integer points of the respective problems. Describing as well as identifying these inequalities will help in the efficiency of the LP-based cutting plane methods. In this report, we review classes of inequalities that partially described zero-one poly topes such as the 0-1 knapsack polytope, the set packing polytope and the travelling salesman polytope. Facets or valid inequalities derived from the 0-1 knapsack and the set packing polytopes are algorithmically identifie
On Solving Travelling Salesman Problem with Vertex Requisitions
We consider the Travelling Salesman Problem with Vertex Requisitions, where
for each position of the tour at most two possible vertices are given. It is
known that the problem is strongly NP-hard. The proposed algorithm for this
problem has less time complexity compared to the previously known one. In
particular, almost all feasible instances of the problem are solvable in O(n)
time using the new algorithm, where n is the number of vertices. The developed
approach also helps in fast enumeration of a neighborhood in the local search
and yields an integer programming model with O(n) binary variables for the
problem.Comment: To appear in Yugoslav Journal of Operations Researc
Families with infants: a general approach to solve hard partition problems
We introduce a general approach for solving partition problems where the goal
is to represent a given set as a union (either disjoint or not) of subsets
satisfying certain properties. Many NP-hard problems can be naturally stated as
such partition problems. We show that if one can find a large enough system of
so-called families with infants for a given problem, then this problem can be
solved faster than by a straightforward algorithm. We use this approach to
improve known bounds for several NP-hard problems as well as to simplify the
proofs of several known results.
For the chromatic number problem we present an algorithm with
time and exponential space for graphs of average
degree . This improves the algorithm by Bj\"{o}rklund et al. [Theory Comput.
Syst. 2010] that works for graphs of bounded maximum (as opposed to average)
degree and closes an open problem stated by Cygan and Pilipczuk [ICALP 2013].
For the traveling salesman problem we give an algorithm working in
time and polynomial space for graphs of average
degree . The previously known results of this kind is a polyspace algorithm
by Bj\"{o}rklund et al. [ICALP 2008] for graphs of bounded maximum degree and
an exponential space algorithm for bounded average degree by Cygan and
Pilipczuk [ICALP 2013].
For counting perfect matching in graphs of average degree~ we present an
algorithm with running time and polynomial
space. Recent algorithms of this kind due to Cygan, Pilipczuk [ICALP 2013] and
Izumi, Wadayama [FOCS 2012] (for bipartite graphs only) use exponential space.Comment: 18 pages, a revised version of this paper is available at
http://arxiv.org/abs/1410.220
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