Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Gemini 2.5 Flash
Gemini 2.5 Flash
119 tokens/sec
GPT-4o
56 tokens/sec
Gemini 2.5 Pro Pro
43 tokens/sec
o3 Pro
6 tokens/sec
GPT-4.1 Pro
47 tokens/sec
DeepSeek R1 via Azure Pro
28 tokens/sec
2000 character limit reached

A Linear-Size Logarithmic Stretch Path-Reporting Distance Oracle for General Graphs (1506.08392v1)

Published 28 Jun 2015 in cs.DS

Abstract: In 2001 Thorup and Zwick devised a distance oracle, which given an $n$-vertex undirected graph and a parameter $k$, has size $O(k n{1+1/k})$. Upon a query $(u,v)$ their oracle constructs a $(2k-1)$-approximate path $\Pi$ between $u$ and $v$. The query time of the Thorup-Zwick's oracle is $O(k)$, and it was subsequently improved to $O(1)$ by Chechik. A major drawback of the oracle of Thorup and Zwick is that its space is $\Omega(n \cdot \log n)$. Mendel and Naor devised an oracle with space $O(n{1+1/k})$ and stretch $O(k)$, but their oracle can only report distance estimates and not actual paths. In this paper we devise a path-reporting distance oracle with size $O(n{1+1/k})$, stretch $O(k)$ and query time $O(n\epsilon)$, for an arbitrarily small $\epsilon > 0$. In particular, our oracle can provide logarithmic stretch using linear size. Another variant of our oracle has size $O(n \log\log n)$, polylogarithmic stretch, and query time $O(\log\log n)$. For unweighted graphs we devise a distance oracle with multiplicative stretch $O(1)$, additive stretch $O(\beta(k))$, for a function $\beta(\cdot)$, space $O(n{1+1/k} \cdot \beta)$, and query time $O(n\epsilon)$, for an arbitrarily small constant $\epsilon >0$. The tradeoff between multiplicative stretch and size in these oracles is far below girth conjecture threshold (which is stretch $2k-1$ and size $O(n{1+1/k})$). Breaking the girth conjecture tradeoff is achieved by exhibiting a tradeoff of different nature between additive stretch $\beta(k)$ and size $O(n{1+1/k})$. A similar type of tradeoff was exhibited by a construction of $(1+\epsilon,\beta)$-spanners due to Elkin and Peleg. However, so far $(1+\epsilon,\beta)$-spanners had no counterpart in the distance oracles' world. An important novel tool that we develop on the way to these results is a {distance-preserving path-reporting oracle}.

User Edit Pencil Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com
Authors (2)
  1. Michael Elkin (44 papers)
  2. Seth Pettie (52 papers)
Citations (30)

Summary

We haven't generated a summary for this paper yet.