A domination algorithm for $\{0,1\}$-instances of the travelling salesman problem (1401.4931v2)
Abstract: We present an approximation algorithm for ${0,1}$-instances of the travelling salesman problem which performs well with respect to combinatorial dominance. More precisely, we give a polynomial-time algorithm which has domination ratio $1-n{-1/29}$. In other words, given a ${0,1}$-edge-weighting of the complete graph $K_n$ on $n$ vertices, our algorithm outputs a Hamilton cycle $H*$ of $K_n$ with the following property: the proportion of Hamilton cycles of $K_n$ whose weight is smaller than that of $H*$ is at most $n{-1/29}$. Our analysis is based on a martingale approach. Previously, the best result in this direction was a polynomial-time algorithm with domination ratio $1/2-o(1)$ for arbitrary edge-weights. We also prove a hardness result showing that, if the Exponential Time Hypothesis holds, there exists a constant $C$ such that $n{-1/29}$ cannot be replaced by $\exp(-(\log n)C)$ in the result above.