A tight quasi-polynomial bound for Global Label Min-Cut
Lars Jaffke, Paloma T. Lima, Tom\'a\v{s} Masa\v{r}\'ik, Marcin Pilipczuk, Ueverton S. Souza

TL;DR
This paper proves that the quasi-polynomial time algorithm for Global Label Min-Cut is likely optimal, establishing its computational hardness and complexity bounds under the Exponential Time Hypothesis.
Contribution
It demonstrates the W[1]-hardness of Global Label Min-Cut parameterized by uncut labels and refines the lower bounds framework for this problem.
Findings
Quasi-polynomial algorithm is probably optimal under ETH.
Global Label Min-Cut is W[1]-hard when parameterized by uncut labels.
Provides a simplified, versatile proof of hardness related to subgraph isomorphism.
Abstract
We study a generalization of the classic Global Min-Cut problem, called Global Label Min-Cut (or sometimes Global Hedge Min-Cut): the edges of the input (multi)graph are labeled (or partitioned into color classes or hedges), and removing all edges of the same label (color or from the same hedge) costs one. The problem asks to disconnect the graph at minimum cost. While the -cut version of the problem is known to be NP-hard, the above global cut version is known to admit a quasi-polynomial randomized -time algorithm due to Ghaffari, Karger, and Panigrahi [SODA 2017]. They consider this as ``strong evidence that this problem is in P''. We show that this is actually not the case. We complete the study of the complexity of the Global Label Min-Cut problem by showing that the quasi-polynomial running time is probably optimal: We show that the existence of an…
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