We significantly improve known time bounds for solving the minimum cut problem on undirected graphs. We use a "semiduality" between minimum cuts and maximum spanning tree packings combined with our previously developed random sampling technfques. We give a randomized (Monte Carlo) algorithm that finds a minimum cut in an m-edge, n-vertex graph with high probability in O(m log3 n) time. We also give a simpler randomized algorithm that finds all minimum cuts with high probability in O(n2 log n) time. This variant has an optimal RNC parallelization. Both variants improve on the previous best time bound of O(n2 log3 n). Other applications of the tree-packing approach are new, nearly tight bounds on the number of near-minimum cuts a graph may have and a new data structure for representing them in a space-efficient manner. General Terms: Algorithms, Theory. © 2000 ACM.
CITATION STYLE
Karger, D. R. (2000). Minimum cuts in near-linear time. Journal of the ACM, 47(1), 46–76. https://doi.org/10.1145/331605.331608
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