Title : 
Algorithmic graph minor theory: Decomposition, approximation, and coloring
         
        
            Author : 
Demaine, Erik D. ; Hajiaghayi, MohammadTaghi ; Kawarabayashi, Ken-ichi
         
        
            Author_Institution : 
Comput. Sci. & Artificial Intelligence Lab., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
         
        
        
        
        
        
            Abstract : 
At the core of the seminal graph minor theory of Robertson and Seymour is a powerful structural theorem capturing the structure of graphs excluding a fixed minor. This result is used throughout graph theory and graph algorithms, but is existential. We develop a polynomial-time algorithm using topological graph theory to decompose a graph into the structure guaranteed by the theorem: a clique-sum of pieces almost-embeddable into bounded-genus surfaces. This result has many applications. In particular we show applications to developing many approximation algorithms, including a 2-approximation to graph coloring, constant-factor approximations to treewidth and the largest grid minor, combinatorial polylogarithmic approximation to half-integral multicommodity flow, subexponential fixed-parameter algorithms, and PTASs for many minimization and maximization problems, on graphs excluding a fixed minor.
         
        
            Keywords : 
computational complexity; graph colouring; algorithmic graph minor theory; approximation algorithm; combinatorial polylogarithmic approximation; constant-factor approximation; graph algorithm; graph coloring; half-integral multicommodity flow; largest grid minor; maximization problem; minimization problem; polynomial-time algorithm; subexponential fixed-parameter algorithm; topological graph theory; treewidth; Application software; Approximation algorithms; Computer science; Graph theory; Heart; Minimization methods; Polynomials; Testing; Tree data structures; Tree graphs;
         
        
        
        
            Conference_Titel : 
Foundations of Computer Science, 2005. FOCS 2005. 46th Annual IEEE Symposium on
         
        
            Print_ISBN : 
0-7695-2468-0
         
        
        
            DOI : 
10.1109/SFCS.2005.14