Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1141493 Discrete Optimization 2015 21 Pages PDF
Abstract

Given an undirected graph, a bramble is a set of connected subgraphs (called bramble elements) such that every pair of subgraphs either contains a common node, or such that an edge (i,j)(i,j) exists with node ii belonging to one subgraph and node jj belonging to the other. In this paper we examine the problem of finding the bramble number of a graph, along with a set of bramble elements that yields this number. The bramble number is the largest cardinality of a minimum hitting set over all bramble elements on this graph. A graph with bramble number kk has a treewidth of k−1k−1. We provide a branch-and-price-and-cut method that generates columns corresponding to bramble elements, and rows corresponding to hitting sets. We then examine the computational efficacy of our algorithm on a randomly generated data set.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Control and Optimization
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