Cut Query Algorithms with Star Contraction

We study the complexity of determining the edge connectivity of a simple graph with cut queries. We show that (i) there is a bounded-error randomized algorithm that computes edge connectivity with O(n) cut queries, and (ii) there is a bounded-error quantum algorithm that computes edge connectivity w...

Celý popis

Uloženo v:
Podrobná bibliografie
Vydáno v:Proceedings / annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science s. 507 - 518
Hlavní autoři: Apers, Simon, Efron, Yuval, Gawrychowski, Pawel, Lee, Troy, Mukhopadhyay, Sagnik, Nanongkai, Danupon
Médium: Konferenční příspěvek
Jazyk:angličtina
Vydáno: IEEE 01.10.2022
Témata:
ISSN:2575-8454
On-line přístup:Získat plný text
Tagy: Přidat tag
Žádné tagy, Buďte první, kdo vytvoří štítek k tomuto záznamu!
Popis
Shrnutí:We study the complexity of determining the edge connectivity of a simple graph with cut queries. We show that (i) there is a bounded-error randomized algorithm that computes edge connectivity with O(n) cut queries, and (ii) there is a bounded-error quantum algorithm that computes edge connectivity with \tilde{O}(\sqrt{}n) cut queries. To prove these results we introduce a new technique, called star contraction, to randomly contract edges of a graph while preserving non-trivial minimum cuts. In star contraction vertices randomly contract an edge incident on a small set of randomly chosen "center" vertices. In contrast to the related 2-out contraction technique of Ghaffari, Nowicki, and Thorup [SODA'20], star contraction only contracts vertex-disjoint star subgraphs, which allows it to be efficiently implemented via cut queries. The O(n) bound from item (i) was not known even for the simpler problem of connectivity, and it improves the O(n\log^{3}n) upper bound by Rubinstein, Schramm, and Weinberg [ITCS'18]. The bound is tight under the reasonable conjecture that the randomized communication complexity of connectivity is \Omega(n\log n), an open question since the seminal work of Babai, Frankl, and Simon [FOCS'86]. The bound also excludes using edge connectivity on simple graphs to prove a superlinear randomized query lower bound for minimizing a symmetric submodular function. The quantum algorithm from item (ii) gives a nearlyquadratic separation with the randomized complexity, and addresses an open question of Lee, Santha, and Zhang [SODA'21]. The algorithm can alternatively be viewed as computing the edge connectivity of a simple graph with \tilde{O}(\sqrt{}n) matrix-vector multiplication queries to its adjacency matrix. Finally, we demonstrate the use of star contraction outside of the cut query setting by designing a one-pass semi-streaming algorithm for computing edge connectivity in the complete vertex arrival setting. This contrasts with the edge arrival setting where two passes are required.
ISSN:2575-8454
DOI:10.1109/FOCS54457.2022.00055