Reductions Between Expansion Problems
Prasad Raghavendra, David Steurer, Madhur Tulsiani

TL;DR
This paper proves the equivalence between the Small-Set Expansion Hypothesis and a variant of the Unique Games Conjecture, establishing it as a central unifying hypothesis with implications for hardness results in graph partitioning problems.
Contribution
It demonstrates the equivalence of the Small-Set Expansion Hypothesis to a restricted version of the Unique Games Conjecture and derives new hardness of approximation results for Balanced Separator and Minimum Linear Arrangement.
Findings
Small-Set Expansion Hypothesis is equivalent to a variant of the Unique Games Conjecture.
Established strong hardness of approximation for Balanced Separator.
Established strong hardness of approximation for Minimum Linear Arrangement.
Abstract
The Small-Set Expansion Hypothesis (Raghavendra, Steurer, STOC 2010) is a natural hardness assumption concerning the problem of approximating the edge expansion of small sets in graphs. This hardness assumption is closely connected to the Unique Games Conjecture (Khot, STOC 2002). In particular, the Small-Set Expansion Hypothesis implies the Unique Games Conjecture (Raghavendra, Steurer, STOC 2010). Our main result is that the Small-Set Expansion Hypothesis is in fact equivalent to a variant of the Unique Games Conjecture. More precisely, the hypothesis is equivalent to the Unique Games Conjecture restricted to instance with a fairly mild condition on the expansion of small sets. Alongside, we obtain the first strong hardness of approximation results for the Balanced Separator and Minimum Linear Arrangement problems. Before, no such hardness was known for these problems even assuming…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplexity and Algorithms in Graphs · Advanced Graph Theory Research · Limits and Structures in Graph Theory
