Abstract

The min-min problem of finding a disjoint-path pair with the length of the shorter path minimized is known to be NP-complete and admits no K-approximation for any K > 1 in the general case [1]. In this paper, we show that Bhatia et al [2]'s NP-complete proof, a claim of correction to Xu et al's proof [1], for the edge-disjoint min-min problem in undirected graphs is incorrect by giving a counter example that is an unsatisfiable 3SAT instance but classified as a satisfiable 3SAT instance in Bhatia et al's proof [2]. We then give a correct proof of NP-completeness of this problem in undirected graphs.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call