Circulant TSP: Vertices of the Edge-Length Polytope and Superpolynomial Lower Bounds
Abstract
We study the edge-length polytope, motivated both by algorithmic research on the Circulant Traveling Salesman Problem (Circulant TSP) and number-theoretic research related to the Buratti-Horak-Rosa conjecture. Circulant TSP is a special case of TSP whose overall complexity is a significant still-open question, and where on an input with vertices \1, 2, ..., n\, the cost of an edge \i, j\ depends only on its length \|i-j|, n-|i-j|\. The edge-length polytope provides one path to solving circulant TSP instances, and we show that it is intimately connected to the factorization of n: the number of vertices scales with n whenever n is prime and with n3/2 whenever n is a prime-squared, but there are a superpolynomial number of vertices whenever n is a power of 2. In contrast, the more-standard Symmetric TSP Polytope has roughly n! vertices. Hence, for Circulant TSP, a brute-force algorithm checking every vertex is actually efficient in some cases, based on the factorization of n. As an intermediate step, we give superpolynomial lower-bounds on two combinatorial sequences related to the Buratti-Horak-Rosa conjecture, which asks what combinations of edge lengths can comprise a Hamiltonian path.
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