Completely Independent Steiner Trees
Anil Maheshwari, Karthik Murali, Michiel Smid

TL;DR
This paper introduces and studies the concept of completely independent Steiner trees, generalizing existing notions of disjoint spanning trees, with results on their structure, algorithms, complexity, and applications to specific graph classes.
Contribution
It defines the Steiner analogue of completely independent spanning trees and provides characterizations, bounds, algorithms, hardness results, and applications.
Findings
Characterizations of completely independent Steiner trees
Connectivity bounds established for various graph classes
Algorithms and hardness results for constructing such trees
Abstract
Spanning trees are fundamental for efficient communication in networks. For fault-tolerant communication, it is desirable to have multiple spanning trees to ensure resilience against failures of nodes and edges. To this end, various notions of disjoint or independent spanning trees have been studied, including edge-disjoint, node/edge-independent, and completely independent spanning trees. Alongside these, several Steiner variants have also been investigated, where the trees are required to span a designated subset of vertices called terminals. For instance, the study of edge-disjoint spanning trees has been extended to edge-disjoint Steiner trees; a stronger variant is the problem of internally disjoint Steiner trees, where any two Steiner trees intersect exactly in the terminals. In this paper, we investigate the Steiner analogue of completely independent spanning trees, which we…
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