3,391 research outputs found

    Sparse Fault-Tolerant BFS Trees

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    This paper addresses the problem of designing a sparse {\em fault-tolerant} BFS tree, or {\em FT-BFS tree} for short, namely, a sparse subgraph TT of the given network GG such that subsequent to the failure of a single edge or vertex, the surviving part TT' of TT still contains a BFS spanning tree for (the surviving part of) GG. Our main results are as follows. We present an algorithm that for every nn-vertex graph GG and source node ss constructs a (single edge failure) FT-BFS tree rooted at ss with O(n \cdot \min\{\Depth(s), \sqrt{n}\}) edges, where \Depth(s) is the depth of the BFS tree rooted at ss. This result is complemented by a matching lower bound, showing that there exist nn-vertex graphs with a source node ss for which any edge (or vertex) FT-BFS tree rooted at ss has Ω(n3/2)\Omega(n^{3/2}) edges. We then consider {\em fault-tolerant multi-source BFS trees}, or {\em FT-MBFS trees} for short, aiming to provide (following a failure) a BFS tree rooted at each source sSs\in S for some subset of sources SVS\subseteq V. Again, tight bounds are provided, showing that there exists a poly-time algorithm that for every nn-vertex graph and source set SVS \subseteq V of size σ\sigma constructs a (single failure) FT-MBFS tree T(S)T^*(S) from each source siSs_i \in S, with O(σn3/2)O(\sqrt{\sigma} \cdot n^{3/2}) edges, and on the other hand there exist nn-vertex graphs with source sets SVS \subseteq V of cardinality σ\sigma, on which any FT-MBFS tree from SS has Ω(σn3/2)\Omega(\sqrt{\sigma}\cdot n^{3/2}) edges. Finally, we propose an O(logn)O(\log n) approximation algorithm for constructing FT-BFS and FT-MBFS structures. The latter is complemented by a hardness result stating that there exists no Ω(logn)\Omega(\log n) approximation algorithm for these problems under standard complexity assumptions

    Stable scalable control of soliton propagation in broadband nonlinear optical waveguides

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    We develop a method for achieving scalable transmission stabilization and switching of NN colliding soliton sequences in optical waveguides with broadband delayed Raman response and narrowband nonlinear gain-loss. We show that dynamics of soliton amplitudes in NN-sequence transmission is described by a generalized NN-dimensional predator-prey model. Stability and bifurcation analysis for the predator-prey model are used to obtain simple conditions on the physical parameters for robust transmission stabilization as well as on-off and off-on switching of MM out of NN soliton sequences. Numerical simulations for single-waveguide transmission with a system of NN coupled nonlinear Schr\"odinger equations with 2N42 \le N \le 4 show excellent agreement with the predator-prey model's predictions and stable propagation over significantly larger distances compared with other broadband nonlinear single-waveguide systems. Moreover, stable on-off and off-on switching of multiple soliton sequences and stable multiple transmission switching events are demonstrated by the simulations. We discuss the reasons for the robustness and scalability of transmission stabilization and switching in waveguides with broadband delayed Raman response and narrowband nonlinear gain-loss, and explain their advantages compared with other broadband nonlinear waveguides.Comment: 37 pages, 7 figures, Eur. Phys. J. D (accepted

    Secluded Connectivity Problems

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    Consider a setting where possibly sensitive information sent over a path in a network is visible to every {neighbor} of the path, i.e., every neighbor of some node on the path, thus including the nodes on the path itself. The exposure of a path PP can be measured as the number of nodes adjacent to it, denoted by N[P]N[P]. A path is said to be secluded if its exposure is small. A similar measure can be applied to other connected subgraphs, such as Steiner trees connecting a given set of terminals. Such subgraphs may be relevant due to considerations of privacy, security or revenue maximization. This paper considers problems related to minimum exposure connectivity structures such as paths and Steiner trees. It is shown that on unweighted undirected nn-node graphs, the problem of finding the minimum exposure path connecting a given pair of vertices is strongly inapproximable, i.e., hard to approximate within a factor of O(2log1ϵn)O(2^{\log^{1-\epsilon}n}) for any ϵ>0\epsilon>0 (under an appropriate complexity assumption), but is approximable with ratio Δ+3\sqrt{\Delta}+3, where Δ\Delta is the maximum degree in the graph. One of our main results concerns the class of bounded-degree graphs, which is shown to exhibit the following interesting dichotomy. On the one hand, the minimum exposure path problem is NP-hard on node-weighted or directed bounded-degree graphs (even when the maximum degree is 4). On the other hand, we present a polynomial algorithm (based on a nontrivial dynamic program) for the problem on unweighted undirected bounded-degree graphs. Likewise, the problem is shown to be polynomial also for the class of (weighted or unweighted) bounded-treewidth graphs

    On the impact of independence of irrelevant alternatives

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    On several classes of n-person NTU games that have at least one Shapley NTU value, Aumann characterized this solution by six axioms: Non-emptiness, efficiency, unanimity, scale covariance, conditional additivity, and independence of irrelevant alternatives (IIA). Each of the first five axioms is logically independent of the remaining axioms, and the logical independence of IIA is an open problem. We show that for n = 2 the first five axioms already characterize the Shapley NTU value, provided that the class of games is not further restricted. Moreover, we present an example of a solution that satisfies the first 5 axioms and violates IIA for 2-person NTU games (N,V) with uniformly p-smooth V(N).NTU game; Shapley NTU value; positive smoothness

    Parallel Metric Tree Embedding based on an Algebraic View on Moore-Bellman-Ford

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    A \emph{metric tree embedding} of expected \emph{stretch~α1\alpha \geq 1} maps a weighted nn-node graph G=(V,E,ω)G = (V, E, \omega) to a weighted tree T=(VT,ET,ωT)T = (V_T, E_T, \omega_T) with VVTV \subseteq V_T such that, for all v,wVv,w \in V, dist(v,w,G)dist(v,w,T)\operatorname{dist}(v, w, G) \leq \operatorname{dist}(v, w, T) and operatornameE[dist(v,w,T)]αdist(v,w,G)operatorname{E}[\operatorname{dist}(v, w, T)] \leq \alpha \operatorname{dist}(v, w, G). Such embeddings are highly useful for designing fast approximation algorithms, as many hard problems are easy to solve on tree instances. However, to date the best parallel (polylogn)(\operatorname{polylog} n)-depth algorithm that achieves an asymptotically optimal expected stretch of αO(logn)\alpha \in \operatorname{O}(\log n) requires Ω(n2)\operatorname{\Omega}(n^2) work and a metric as input. In this paper, we show how to achieve the same guarantees using polylogn\operatorname{polylog} n depth and O~(m1+ϵ)\operatorname{\tilde{O}}(m^{1+\epsilon}) work, where m=Em = |E| and ϵ>0\epsilon > 0 is an arbitrarily small constant. Moreover, one may further reduce the work to O~(m+n1+ϵ)\operatorname{\tilde{O}}(m + n^{1+\epsilon}) at the expense of increasing the expected stretch to O(ϵ1logn)\operatorname{O}(\epsilon^{-1} \log n). Our main tool in deriving these parallel algorithms is an algebraic characterization of a generalization of the classic Moore-Bellman-Ford algorithm. We consider this framework, which subsumes a variety of previous "Moore-Bellman-Ford-like" algorithms, to be of independent interest and discuss it in depth. In our tree embedding algorithm, we leverage it for providing efficient query access to an approximate metric that allows sampling the tree using polylogn\operatorname{polylog} n depth and O~(m)\operatorname{\tilde{O}}(m) work. We illustrate the generality and versatility of our techniques by various examples and a number of additional results
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