On the Locality of Nash-Williams Forest Decomposition and Star-Forest Decomposition
David G. Harris, Hsin-Hao Su, Hoa T. Vu

TL;DR
This paper improves distributed algorithms for decomposing graphs into nearly optimal forests and star-forests, reducing the threshold for approximation and providing the first linear dependency algorithms on epsilon.
Contribution
It reduces the epsilon-alpha threshold for forest and star-forest decompositions and introduces the first linear dependency algorithms on epsilon in this context.
Findings
Achieved a $(1+ ext{epsilon}) imes$ arboricity decomposition in distributed models.
Provided the first $(1+ ext{epsilon}) imes$ orientation algorithms with linear epsilon dependence.
Enhanced understanding of star-arboricity bounds through probabilistic analysis.
Abstract
Given a graph with arboricity , we study the problem of decomposing the edges of into disjoint forests in the distributed LOCAL model. Barenboim and Elkin [PODC `08] gave a LOCAL algorithm that computes a -forest decomposition using rounds. Ghaffari and Su [SODA `17] made further progress by computing a -forest decomposition in rounds when , i.e. the limit of their algorithm is an -forest decomposition. This algorithm, based on a combinatorial construction of Alon, McDiarmid \& Reed [Combinatorica `92], in fact provides a decomposition of the graph into \emph{star-forests}, i.e. each forest is a collection of stars. Our main result in this paper is to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Graph Theory Research · Complexity and Algorithms in Graphs · Optimization and Search Problems
