Parameterized Spanning Tree Congestion
Abstract
In this paper we study the Spanning Tree Congestion problem, where we are given a graph and are asked to find a spanning tree of minimum maximum congestion. Here, the congestion of an edge is the number of edges such that the (unique) path from to in traverses . We consider this well-studied NP-hard problem from the point of view of (structural) parameterized complexity and obtain the following results. We resolve a natural open problem by showing that Spanning Tree Congestion is not FPT parameterized by treewidth (under standard assumptions). More strongly, we present a generic reduction which applies to (almost) any parameter of the form ``vertex-deletion distance to class '', thus obtaining W[1]-hardness for parameters more restricted than treewidth, including tree-depth plus feedback vertex set, or incomparable to treewidth, such as twin cover. Via a slight tweak of the same reduction we also show that the problem is NP-complete on interval graphs of modular-width . Even though it is known that Spanning Tree Congestion remains NP-hard on instances with only one vertex of unbounded degree, it is currently open whether the problem remains hard on bounded-degree graphs. We resolve this question by showing NP-hardness on graphs of maximum degree 8. Complementing the problem's W[1]-hardness for treewidth...
Cite
@article{arxiv.2410.08314,
title = {Parameterized Spanning Tree Congestion},
author = {Michael Lampis and Valia Mitsou and Edouard Nemery and Yota Otachi and Manolis Vasilakis and Daniel Vaz},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.08314},
year = {2026}
}
Comments
Abstract cropped to meet arXiv's requirements. Presented at MFCS 2025