Abstract

Our main result is that the Steiner Point Removal (SPR) problem can always be solved with polylogarithmic distortion, which resolves in the affirmative a question posed by Chan, Xia, Konjevod, and Richa (2006). Specifically, we prove that for every edge-weighted graph G = (V, E, w) and a subset of terminals T ⊆ V, there is a graph G′ = (T, E′, w′) that is isomorphic to a minor of G, such that for every two terminals u, v ∊ T, the shortest-path distances between them in G and in G′ satisfy dG,w(u, v) ≤ dG′,w′(u, v) ≤ O(log6 |T|) · dG,w(u, v). Our existence proof actually gives a randomized polynomial-time algorithm. Our proof features a new variant of metric decomposition. It is well-known that every finite metric space (X, d) admits a β-separating decomposition for β = O(log|X|), which roughly means for every desired diameter bound Δ > 0 there is a randomized partitioning of X, which satisfies the following separation requirement: for every x, y ∊ X, the probability they lie in different clusters of the partition is at most β d(x,y)/Δ. We introduce an additional requirement, which is the following tail bound: for every shortest-path P of length d(P) ≤ Δ/β, the number of clusters of the partition that meet the path P, denoted ZP, satisfies Pr[ZP > t] ≤ 2e−Ω(t) for all t > 0.

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