English

Improved Approximation for Tree Augmentation: Saving by Rewiring

Data Structures and Algorithms 2018-04-09 v1

Abstract

The Tree Augmentation Problem (TAP) is a fundamental network design problem in which we are given a tree and a set of additional edges, also called \emph{links}. The task is to find a set of links, of minimum size, whose addition to the tree leads to a 22-edge-connected graph. A long line of results on TAP culminated in the previously best known approximation guarantee of 1.51.5 achieved by a combinatorial approach due to Kortsarz and Nutov [ACM Transactions on Algorithms 2016], and also by an SDP-based approach by Cheriyan and Gao [Algorithmica 2017]. Moreover, an elegant LP-based (1.5+ϵ)(1.5+\epsilon)-approximation has also been found very recently by Fiorini, Gro\ss, K\"onemann, and Sanit\'a [SODA 2018]. In this paper, we show that an approximation factor below 1.51.5 can be achieved, by presenting a 1.4581.458-approximation that is based on several new techniques.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1804.02242,
  title  = {Improved Approximation for Tree Augmentation: Saving by Rewiring},
  author = {Fabrizio Grandoni and Christos Kalaitzis and Rico Zenklusen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1804.02242},
  year   = {2018}
}