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Deterministic Algorithms for Decremental Approximate Shortest Paths: Faster and Simpler

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arxiv 2001.10809 v1 pith:2LG4MVSB submitted 2020-01-29 cs.DS

Deterministic Algorithms for Decremental Approximate Shortest Paths: Faster and Simpler

classification cs.DS
keywords algorithmdecrementalepsilonapproximatedistmathbftimedeterministic
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In the decremental $(1+\epsilon)$-approximate Single-Source Shortest Path (SSSP) problem, we are given a graph $G=(V,E)$ with $n = |V|, m = |E|$, undergoing edge deletions, and a distinguished source $s \in V$, and we are asked to process edge deletions efficiently and answer queries for distance estimates $\widetilde{\mathbf{dist}}_G(s,v)$ for each $v \in V$, at any stage, such that $\mathbf{dist}_G(s,v) \leq \widetilde{\mathbf{dist}}_G(s,v) \leq (1+ \epsilon)\mathbf{dist}_G(s,v)$. In the decremental $(1+\epsilon)$-approximate All-Pairs Shortest Path (APSP) problem, we are asked to answer queries for distance estimates $\widetilde{\mathbf{dist}}_G(u,v)$ for every $u,v \in V$. In this article, we consider the problems for undirected, unweighted graphs. We present a new \emph{deterministic} algorithm for the decremental $(1+\epsilon)$-approximate SSSP problem that takes total update time $O(mn^{0.5 + o(1)})$. Our algorithm improves on the currently best algorithm for dense graphs by Chechik and Bernstein [STOC 2016] with total update time $\tilde{O}(n^2)$ and the best existing algorithm for sparse graphs with running time $\tilde{O}(n^{1.25}\sqrt{m})$ [SODA 2017] whenever $m = O(n^{1.5 - o(1)})$. In order to obtain this new algorithm, we develop several new techniques including improved decremental cover data structures for graphs, a more efficient notion of the heavy/light decomposition framework introduced by Chechik and Bernstein and the first clustering technique to maintain a dynamic \emph{sparse} emulator in the deterministic setting. As a by-product, we also obtain a new simple deterministic algorithm for the decremental $(1+\epsilon)$-approximate APSP problem with near-optimal total running time $\tilde{O}(mn /\epsilon)$ matching the time complexity of the sophisticated but rather involved algorithm by Henzinger, Forster and Nanongkai [FOCS 2013].

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