Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
421186 Discrete Applied Mathematics 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

We show that testing if an undirected graph contains a bridgeless spanning cactus is NP-hard. As a consequence, the minimum spanning cactus problem (MSCP) on an undirected graph with 0–1 edge weights is NP-hard. For any subgraph SS of KnKn, we give polynomially testable necessary and sufficient conditions for SS to be extendable to a cactus in KnKn and the weighted version of this problem is shown to be NP-hard. A spanning tree is shown to be extendable to a cactus in KnKn if and only if it has at least one node of even degree. When SS is a spanning tree, we show that the weighted version can also be solved in polynomial time. Further, we give an O(n3)O(n3) algorithm for computing a minimum cost spanning tree with at least one vertex of even degree on a graph on nn nodes. Finally, we show that for a complete graph with edge-costs satisfying the triangle inequality, the MSCP is equivalent to a general class of optimization problems that properly includes the traveling salesman problem and they all have the same approximation hardness.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computational Theory and Mathematics
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