112 research outputs found
Towards obtaining a 3-Decomposition from a perfect Matching
A decomposition of a graph is a set of subgraphs whose edges partition those
of . The 3-decomposition conjecture posed by Hoffmann-Ostenhof in 2011
states that every connected cubic graph can be decomposed into a spanning tree,
a 2-regular subgraph, and a matching. It has been settled for special classes
of graphs, one of the first results being for Hamiltonian graphs. In the past
two years several new results have been obtained, adding the classes of plane,
claw-free, and 3-connected tree-width 3 graphs to the list.
In this paper, we regard a natural extension of Hamiltonian graphs: removing
a Hamiltonian cycle from a cubic graph leaves a perfect matching. Conversely,
removing a perfect matching from a cubic graph leaves a disjoint union
of cycles. Contracting these cycles yields a new graph . The graph is
star-like if is a star for some perfect matching , making Hamiltonian
graphs star-like. We extend the technique used to prove that Hamiltonian graphs
satisfy the 3-decomposition conjecture to show that 3-connected star-like
graphs satisfy it as well.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figure
Semi-Preemptive Routing on Trees
We study a variant of the pickup-and-delivery problem (PDP) in which the objects that have to be transported can be reloaded at most d times, for a given integer d. This problem is known to be polynomially solvable on paths or cycles and NP-complete on trees. We present a (4/3+epsilon)-approximation algorithm if the underlying graph is a tree. By using a result of Charikar et al. (1998), this can be extended to a O(log n log log n)-approximation for general graphs
Semi-Preemptive Routing on Trees
We study a variant of the pickup-and-delivery problem (PDP) in which the objects that have to be transported can be reloaded at most d times, for a given integer d. This problem is known to be polynomially solvable on paths or cycles and NP-complete on trees. We present a (4/3+epsilon)-approximation algorithm if the underlying graph is a tree. By using a result of Charikar et al. (1998), this can be extended to a O(log n log log n)-approximation for general graphs
Integer Flows with Multipliers 1 and 2
The problem to find a valid Integer generalized flow is long known to be NP-complete (S. Sahni, 1974). We show that the problem is still hard restricted to multipliers 1 and 2 and that optimal solutions with (almost) arbitrary fractions can occur. In some (still NP-hard) application motivated network instances optimal solutions are halfintegral. To solve the latter (optimally) we modify the Successive Shortest Path Algorithm and try to (heuristically) find acceptable integral solutions
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