English

Minimum Stable Cut and Treewidth

Computational Complexity 2026-04-08 v4 Data Structures and Algorithms

Abstract

A stable or locally-optimal cut of a graph is a cut whose weight cannot be increased by changing the side of a single vertex. In this paper we study Minimum Stable Cut, the problem of finding a stable cut of minimum weight. Since this problem is NP-hard, we study its complexity on graphs of low treewidth, low degree, or both. We begin by showing that the problem remains weakly NP-hard on severely restricted trees, so bounding treewidth alone cannot make it tractable. We match this hardness with a pseudo-polynomial DP algorithm solving the problem in time (ΔW)O(tw)nO(1)(\Delta\cdot W)^{O(tw)}n^{O(1)}, where twtw is the treewidth, Δ\Delta the maximum degree, and WW the maximum weight. On the other hand, bounding Δ\Delta is also not enough, as the problem is NP-hard for unweighted graphs of bounded degree. We therefore parameterize Minimum Stable Cut by both twtw and Δ\Delta and obtain an FPT algorithm running in time 2O(Δtw)(n+logW)O(1)2^{O(\Delta tw)}(n+\log W)^{O(1)}. Our main result for the weighted problem is to provide a reduction showing that both aforementioned algorithms are essentially optimal, even if we replace treewidth by pathwidth: if there exists an algorithm running in (nW)o(pw)(nW)^{o(pw)} or 2o(Δpw)(n+logW)O(1)2^{o(\Delta pw)}(n+\log W)^{O(1)}, then the ETH is false. Complementing this, we show that we can, however, obtain an FPT approximation scheme parameterized by treewidth, if we consider almost-stable solutions, that is, solutions where no single vertex can unilaterally increase the weight of its incident cut edges by more than a factor of (1+ε)(1+\varepsilon). Motivated by these mostly negative results, we consider Unweighted Minimum Stable Cut. Here our results already imply a much faster exact algorithm running in time ΔO(tw)nO(1)\Delta^{O(tw)}n^{O(1)}. We show that this is also probably essentially optimal: an algorithm running in no(pw)n^{o(pw)} would contradict the ETH.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2104.13097,
  title  = {Minimum Stable Cut and Treewidth},
  author = {Michael Lampis},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2104.13097},
  year   = {2026}
}

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Full version of ICALP 2021 paper