English

Subexponential-time algorithms for finding large induced sparse subgraphs

Computational Complexity 2019-10-03 v1

Abstract

Let C\mathcal{C} and D\mathcal{D} be hereditary graph classes. Consider the following problem: given a graph GDG\in\mathcal{D}, find a largest, in terms of the number of vertices, induced subgraph of GG that belongs to C\mathcal{C}. We prove that it can be solved in 2o(n)2^{o(n)} time, where nn is the number of vertices of GG, if the following conditions are satisfied: * the graphs in C\mathcal{C} are sparse, i.e., they have linearly many edges in terms of the number of vertices; * the graphs in D\mathcal{D} admit balanced separators of size governed by their density, e.g., O(Δ)\mathcal{O}(\Delta) or O(m)\mathcal{O}(\sqrt{m}), where Δ\Delta and mm denote the maximum degree and the number of edges, respectively; and * the considered problem admits a single-exponential fixed-parameter algorithm when parameterized by the treewidth of the input graph. This leads, for example, to the following corollaries for specific classes C\mathcal{C} and D\mathcal{D}: * a largest induced forest in a PtP_t-free graph can be found in 2O~(n2/3)2^{\tilde{\mathcal{O}}(n^{2/3})} time, for every fixed tt; and * a largest induced planar graph in a string graph can be found in 2O~(n3/4)2^{\tilde{\mathcal{O}}(n^{3/4})} time.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1910.01082,
  title  = {Subexponential-time algorithms for finding large induced sparse subgraphs},
  author = {Jana Novotná and Karolina Okrasa and Michał Pilipczuk and Paweł Rzążewski and Erik Jan van Leeuwen and Bartosz Walczak},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1910.01082},
  year   = {2019}
}

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Appeared on IPEC 2019