The 0/1 primal separation problem is: Given an extreme point $\bar{x}$ of a 0/1 polytope $P$ and some point $x^*$, find an inequality which is tight at $\bar{x}$, violated by $x^*$ and valid for $P$ or assert that no such inequality exists. It is known that this separation variant can be reduced to the standard separation problem for $P$. We show that 0/1 optimization and 0/1 primal separation are polynomial time equivalent. This implies that the problems 0/1 optimization, 0/1 standard separation, 0/1 augmentation, and 0/1 primal separation are polynomial time equivalent. Then we provide polynomial time primal separation procedures for matching, stable set, maximum cut, and maximum bipartite graph problems, giving evidence that these algorithms are conceptually simpler and easier to implement than their corresponding counterparts for standard separation. In particular, for perfect matching we present an algorithm for primal separation that rests only on simple max-flow computations. Consequently, we obtain a very simple proof that a maximum weight perfect matching of a graph can be computed in polynomial time. In contrast, the known standard separation method involves Padberg and Rao's minimum odd cut algorithm, which itself is based on the construction of a Gomory-Hu tree.
Primal Separation for 0/1 Polytopes
Rinaldi G;Ventura P
2003
Abstract
The 0/1 primal separation problem is: Given an extreme point $\bar{x}$ of a 0/1 polytope $P$ and some point $x^*$, find an inequality which is tight at $\bar{x}$, violated by $x^*$ and valid for $P$ or assert that no such inequality exists. It is known that this separation variant can be reduced to the standard separation problem for $P$. We show that 0/1 optimization and 0/1 primal separation are polynomial time equivalent. This implies that the problems 0/1 optimization, 0/1 standard separation, 0/1 augmentation, and 0/1 primal separation are polynomial time equivalent. Then we provide polynomial time primal separation procedures for matching, stable set, maximum cut, and maximum bipartite graph problems, giving evidence that these algorithms are conceptually simpler and easier to implement than their corresponding counterparts for standard separation. In particular, for perfect matching we present an algorithm for primal separation that rests only on simple max-flow computations. Consequently, we obtain a very simple proof that a maximum weight perfect matching of a graph can be computed in polynomial time. In contrast, the known standard separation method involves Padberg and Rao's minimum odd cut algorithm, which itself is based on the construction of a Gomory-Hu tree.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


