Analysis of Christofides' heuristic: some paths are more difficult than cycles (Q1180833)
From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Analysis of Christofides' heuristic: some paths are more difficult than cycles |
scientific article |
Statements
Analysis of Christofides' heuristic: some paths are more difficult than cycles (English)
0 references
27 June 1992
0 references
Christofides proposed a heuristic for the travelling salesman problem in which the distances satisfy the triangle inequality that produces a cycle with a length that is less than \(3/2\) times the optimum cycle length. The author deals with the problem of finding a Hamiltonian path of minimum total length with zero, one or two prespecified endpoints and formulates Christofides-like algorithms for each of these three problems. It is easy to see that the heuristic is still a \(3/2\)-approximation algorithm for the problems with zero and one endpoint. For the third case the worst performance ratio is shown to be \(5/3\) and it is shown that this bound is tight.
0 references
worst-case analysis
0 references
travelling salesman
0 references
Hamiltonian path
0 references
minimum total length
0 references
Christofides-like algorithms
0 references
heuristic
0 references