Cut-Query Algorithms with Few Rounds
Abstract
In the cut-query model, the algorithm can access the input graph G=(V,E) only via cut queries that report, given a set S⊂eq V, the total weight of edges crossing the cut between S and V S. This model was introduced by Rubinstein, Schramm and Weinberg [ITCS'18] and its investigation has so far focused on the number of queries needed to solve optimization problems, such as global minimum cut. We turn attention to the round complexity of cut-query algorithms, and show that several classical problems can be solved in this model with only a constant number of rounds. Our main results are algorithms for finding a minimum cut in a graph, that offer different tradeoffs between round complexity and query complexity, where n=|V| and δ(G) denotes the minimum degree of G: (i) O(n4/3) cut queries in two rounds in unweighted graphs; (ii) O(rn1+1/r/δ(G)1/r) queries in 2r+1 rounds for any integer r 1 again in unweighted graphs; and (iii) O(rn1+(1+n W)/r) queries in 4r+3 rounds for any r1 in weighted graphs. We also provide algorithms that find a minimum (s,t)-cut and approximate the maximum cut in a few rounds.
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