center problem
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Author(s):  
Velin Kralev ◽  
Radoslava Kraleva ◽  
Viktor Ankov ◽  
Dimitar Chakalov

<span lang="EN-US">This research focuses on the k-center problem and its applications. Different methods for solving this problem are analyzed. The implementations of an exact algorithm and of an approximate algorithm are presented. The source code and the computation complexity of these algorithms are presented and analyzed. The multitasking mode of the operating system is taken into account considering the execution time of the algorithms. The results show that the approximate algorithm finds solutions that are not worse than two times optimal. In some case these solutions are very close to the optimal solutions, but this is true only for graphs with a smaller number of nodes. As the number of nodes in the graph increases (respectively the number of edges increases), the approximate solutions deviate from the optimal ones, but remain acceptable. These results give reason to conclude that for graphs with a small number of nodes the approximate algorithm finds comparable solutions with those founds by the exact algorithm.</span>


Author(s):  
Binay Bhattacharya ◽  
Sandip Das ◽  
Subhadeep Ranjan Dev
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Omid Rabiei Motlagh ◽  
Mahdieh Molaei Derakhtenjani ◽  
Haji Mohammad Mohammadi Nejad

2022 ◽  
Vol 214 ◽  
pp. 112597
Author(s):  
Antonio Algaba ◽  
María Díaz ◽  
Cristóbal García ◽  
Jaume Giné
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 613-620
Author(s):  
Dadang Mohamad ◽  
Alim Al Ayub Ahmed ◽  
Gunawan Widjaja ◽  
Tawfeeq Alghazali ◽  
JohnWilliamGrimaldo Guerrero ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 217-222
Author(s):  
ALEXANDRU ȘUBĂ ◽  

In this paper the center problem for cubic differential systems with the line at infinity of multiplicity four is solved.


Author(s):  
Johannes Blum

AbstractWe study the k-Center problem, where the input is a graph $$G=(V,E)$$ G = ( V , E ) with positive edge weights and an integer k, and the goal is to select k center vertices $$C \subseteq V$$ C ⊆ V such that the maximum distance from any vertex to the closest center vertex is minimized. In general, this problem is $$\mathsf {NP}$$ NP -hard and cannot be approximated within a factor less than 2. Typical applications of the k-Center problem can be found in logistics or urban planning and hence, it is natural to study the problem on transportation networks. Common characterizations of such networks are graphs that are (almost) planar or have low doubling dimension, highway dimension or skeleton dimension. It was shown by Feldmann and Marx that k-Center is $$\mathsf {W[1]}$$ W [ 1 ] -hard on planar graphs of constant doubling dimension when parameterized by the number of centers k, the highway dimension $$hd$$ hd and the pathwidth $$pw$$ pw (Feldmann and Marx 2020). We extend their result and show that even if we additionally parameterize by the skeleton dimension $$\kappa $$ κ , the k-Center problem remains $$\mathsf {W[1]}$$ W [ 1 ] -hard. Moreover, we prove that under the Exponential Time Hypothesis there is no exact algorithm for k-Center that has runtime $$f(k,hd,pw,\kappa ) \cdot \vert V \vert ^{o(pw+ \kappa + \sqrt{k+hd})}$$ f ( k , h d , p w , κ ) · | V | o ( p w + κ + k + h d ) for any computable function f.


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