Abstract

Let G be an undirected graph on n nodes, and let k be an integer that divides n. A k-equipartition π of G is a partition of V(G) into k equal-sized pieces V1,⋯,Vk. A pair Vi, Vj of distinct sets in π is called a bad pair if there is at least one edge vivj of E(G) such that vi ϵVi and vj ϵ Vj. The parameterized equipartition problem is: given G and k, find an optimal k-equipartition of G, i.e., one with the smallest possible number of bad pairs. More generally, a nontrivial equipartition of G is a k-equipartition, for some proper divisor k of n. The equipartition problem is: given G, find a nontrivial equipartition with the minimum number of bad pairs, where the minimum is taken over all divisors k of n and all k-equipartitions. We prove that there are relatively sparse graphs all of whose equipartitions have the maximum number of bad pairs (up to constant factors). We also prove that the parameterized and unparameterized versions of the equipartition problem are NP-hard.

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