2 research outputs found

    Minimum-weight double-tree shortcutting for Metric TSP: Bounding the approximation ratio ✩

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    The Metric Traveling Salesman Problem (TSP) is a classical NP-hard optimization problem. The double-tree shortcutting method for Metric TSP yields an exponentially-sized space of TSP tours, each of which approximates the optimal solution within at most a factor of 2. We consider the problem of finding among these tours the one that gives the closest approximation, i.e. the minimum-weight double-tree shortcutting. Previously, we gave an efficient algorithm for this problem, and carried out its experimental analysis. In this paper, we address the related question of the worst-case approximation ratio for the minimum-weight double-tree shortcutting method. In particular, we give lower bounds on the approximation ratio in some specific metric spaces: the ratio of 2 in the discrete shortest path metric, 1.622 in the planar Euclidean metric, and 1.666 in the planar Minkowski metric. The only known upper bound is 2, which holds trivially in any metric space. We conjecture that for the Euclidean and Minkowski metrics, the upper bound can be improved to match our lower bounds. 1
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