Abstract

Minimum flow decomposition (MFD) is the NP-hard problem of finding a smallest decomposition of a network flow/circulation X on a directed graph G into weighted source-to-sink paths whose weighted sum equals X . We show that, for acyclic graphs, considering the width of the graph (the minimum number of paths needed to cover all of its edges) yields advances in our understanding of its approximability. For the version of the problem that uses only non-negative weights, we identify and characterise a new class of width-stable graphs, for which a popular heuristic is a O (log Val(X))-approximation (Val(X) being the total flow of X ), and strengthen its worst-case approximation ratio from \(\Omega (\sqrt {m}) \) to Ω ( m /log m ) for sparse graphs, where m is the number of edges in the graph. We also study a new problem on graphs with cycles, Minimum Cost Circulation Decomposition (MCCD), and show that it generalises MFD through a simple reduction. For the version allowing also negative weights, we give a (⌈log ‖ X ‖⌉ + 1)-approximation (‖ X ‖ being the maximum absolute value of X on any edge) using a power-of-two approach, combined with parity fixing arguments and a decomposition of unitary circulations (‖ X ‖ ≤ 1), using a generalised notion of width for this problem. Finally, we disprove a conjecture about the linear independence of minimum (non-negative) flow decompositions posed by [17], but show that its useful implication (polynomial-time assignments of weights to a given set of paths to decompose a flow) holds for the negative version.

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