Abstract

Connectivity related concepts are of fundamental interest in graph theory. The area has received extensive attention over four decades, but many problems remain unsolved, especially for directed graphs. A directed graph is 2-edge-connected (resp., 2-vertex-connected) if the removal of any edge (resp., vertex) leaves the graph strongly connected. In this paper we present improved algorithms for computing the maximal 2-edge- and 2-vertex-connected subgraphs of a given directed graph. These problems were first studied more than 35 years ago, with O(mn) time algorithms for graphs with m edges and n vertices being known since the late 1980s. In contrast, the same problems for undirected graphs are known to be solvable in linear time. Henzinger et al. [ICALP 2015] recently introduced O(n2) time algorithms for the directed case, thus improving the running times for dense graphs. Our new algorithms run in time O(m3/2), which further improves the running times for sparse graphs.The notion of 2-connectivity naturally generalizes to k-connectivity for k > 2. For constant values of k, we extend one of our algorithms to compute the maximal k-edge-connected in time O(m3/2 log n), improving again for sparse graphs the best known algorithm by Henzinger et al. [ICALP 2015] that runs in O(n2 log n) time.

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