Counting Perfect Matchings as Fast as Ryser
Abstract
We show that there is a polynomial space algorithm that counts the number of perfect matchings in an n-vertex graph in O*(2n/2)⊂ O(1.415n) time. (O*(f(n)) suppresses functions polylogarithmic in f(n)).The previously fastest algorithms for the problem was the exponential space O*(((1+5)/2)n) ⊂ O(1.619n) time algorithm by Koivisto, and for polynomial space, the O(1.942n) time algorithm by Nederlof. Our new algorithm's runtime matches up to polynomial factors that of Ryser's 1963 algorithm for bipartite graphs. We present our algorithm in the more general setting of computing the hafnian over an arbitrary ring, analogously to Ryser's algorithm for permanent computation. We also give a simple argument why the general exact set cover counting problem over a slightly superpolynomial sized family of subsets of an n element ground set cannot be solved in O*(2(1-ε1)n) time for any ε1>0 unless there are O*(2(1-ε2)n) time algorithms for computing an n× n 0/1 matrix permanent, for some ε2>0 depending only on ε1.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.