Faster Pseudo-Deterministic Minimum Cut
Abstract
Pseudo-deterministic algorithms are randomized algorithms that, with high constant probability, output a fixed canonical solution. The study of pseudo-deterministic algorithms for the global minimum cut problem was recently initiated by Agarwala and Varma [ITCS'26], who gave a black-box reduction incurring an O( n n) overhead. We introduce a natural graph-theoretic tie-breaking mechanism that uniquely selects a canonical minimum cut. Using this mechanism, we obtain: (i) A pseudo-deterministic minimum cut algorithm for weighted graphs running in O(m2 n) time, eliminating the O( n n) overhead of prior work and matching existing randomized algorithms. (ii) The first pseudo-deterministic algorithm for maintaining a canonical minimum cut in a fully-dynamic unweighted graph, with polylog(n) update time and O(n) query time. (iii) Improved pseudo-deterministic algorithms for unweighted graphs in the dynamic streaming and cut-query models of computation, matching the best randomized algorithms.
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