Abstract
Given a complete graph , a positive length function on edges, and two subsets R of V and of R, the selected‐internal Steiner tree is defined to be an acyclic subgraph of G spanning all vertices in R such that no vertex in is a leaf of the subgraph. The bottleneck selected‐internal Steiner tree problem is to find a selected‐internal Steiner tree T for R and in G such that the length of the largest edge in T is minimized. The partial terminal Steiner tree is defined to be an acyclic subgraph of G spanning all vertices in R such that each vertex in is a leaf of the subgraph. The bottleneck partial terminal Steiner tree problem is to find a partial terminal Steiner tree T for R and in G such that the length of the largest edge in T is minimized. In this article, we show that the bottleneck selected‐internal Steiner tree problem is NP‐complete. We also show that if there is a ‐approximation algorithm, , for the bottleneck selected‐internal Steiner tree problem on metric graphs (i.e., a complete graph and the lengths of edges satisfy the triangle inequality), then P=NP. Then we extend to show that if there is an ‐approximation algorithm, , for the bottleneck selected‐internal Steiner tree problem, then P=NP, where is any computable function of . Moreover, we present an approximation algorithm with performance ratio of 3 for the bottleneck selected‐internal Steiner tree problem on metric graphs. Finally, we present an exact algorithm of time for the bottleneck partial terminal Steiner tree problem. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. NETWORKS, Vol. 68(4), 331–339 2016
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