Breaching the 2-Approximation Barrier for the Forest Augmentation Problem
Fabrizio Grandoni, Afrouz Jabal Ameli, Vera Traub

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel approach to surpass the longstanding 2-approximation barrier for the Forest Augmentation Problem by reducing it to the Path Augmentation Problem and developing a better-than-2 approximation algorithm for it.
Contribution
The paper presents the first improvement over the 2-approximation for FAP by reducing it to PAP and solving PAP with a new approximation method.
Findings
Achieved a better-than-2 approximation for PAP.
Developed a reduction from FAP to PAP that is sufficiently accurate.
Introduced a novel implicit credits technique for approximation algorithms.
Abstract
The basic goal of survivable network design is to build cheap networks that guarantee the connectivity of certain pairs of nodes despite the failure of a few edges or nodes. A celebrated result by Jain [Combinatorica'01] provides a 2-approximation for a wide class of these problems. However nothing better is known even for very basic special cases, raising the natural question whether any improved approximation factor is possible at all. In this paper we address one of the most basic problems in this family for which 2 is still the best-known approximation factor, the Forest Augmentation Problem (FAP): given an undirected unweighted graph (that w.l.o.g. is a forest) and a collection of extra edges (links), compute a minimum cardinality subset of links whose addition to the graph makes it 2-edge-connected. Several better-than-2 approximation algorithms are known for the special case…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplexity and Algorithms in Graphs · Advanced Graph Theory Research · Interconnection Networks and Systems
