pith. sign in

arxiv: 1502.03715 · v2 · pith:MZE5CGD7new · submitted 2015-02-12 · 💻 cs.DM · cs.DS· math.CO

Reassembling trees for the traveling salesman

classification 💻 cs.DM cs.DSmath.CO
keywords spanningtreesapproximationtreealgorithmcostminimumreassembling
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

Many recent approximation algorithms for different variants of the traveling salesman problem (asymmetric TSP, graph TSP, s-t-path TSP) exploit the well-known fact that a solution of the natural linear programming relaxation can be written as convex combination of spanning trees. The main argument then is that randomly sampling a tree from such a distribution and then completing the tree to a tour at minimum cost yields a better approximation guarantee than simply taking a minimum cost spanning tree (as in Christofides' algorithm). We argue that an additional step can help: reassembling the spanning trees before sampling. Exchanging two edges in a pair of spanning trees can improve their properties under certain conditions. We demonstrate the usefulness for the metric s-t-path TSP by devising a deterministic polynomial-time algorithm that improves on Seb\H{o}'s previously best approximation ratio of 8/5.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.