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Weighted graphs

Weighted graphs. 12. Example Consider the following graph, where nodes represent cities, and edges show if there is a direct flight between each pair of cities. CHG SF HTD

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Weighted graphs

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  1. Weighted graphs 12 Example Consider the following graph, where nodes represent cities, and edges show if there is a direct flight between each pair of cities. CHG SF HTD OAK ATL LA SD V = {SF, OAK, CHG, HTD, ATL, LA, SD} E = {{SF, HTD}, {SF, CHG}, {SF, LA}, {SF, SD}, {SD, OAK}, {CHG, LA}, {LA, OAK}, {LA, ATL}, {LA, SD}, {ATL, HTD}, {SD, ATL}} 15 34 12 25 25 28 26 20 10

  2. Problem formulation: find the "best" path between two vertices v1, v2  V in graph G = (V, E). Depending on what the "best" path means, we have 2 types of problems: • The minimum spanning tree problem, where the "best" path means the "lowest-cost" path. • The shortest path problem, where the "best" path means the "shortest" path. Note that here edge weights are not necessarily Euclidean distances. Example: 2985 > 1421 + 310, not the case here, however. 800 2 1 200 612 410 310 5 2985 400 4 3 1421

  3. The Weighted Graph ADT Definition A weighted graph, G, is a triple (V, E, W), where (V, E) is a graph, and W is a function from E into Z+, whereZ+is a set of all positive integers. That is, W: E  Z+. Additional operations (methods) on weighted graphs: addEdge(v1, v2, weight) Returns G with new edge v1v2 added removeEdge(v1, v2, weight) Returns G with edge v1v2 removed edgeWeight(v1, v2) Returns the weight of edge v1v2

  4. a h i g c b j k d e l m f The minimum spanning tree problem Definition. A minimum spanning tree of a weighted graph is a collection of edges connecting all of the vertices such that the sum of the weights of the edges is at least as small as the sum of the weights of any other collection of edges connecting all of the vertices. Example Consider the following graph 2 6 3 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 4 4 5 2 3 2 1 4 2 1 2

  5. Property of a minimum spanning tree (MST). Given any division of the vertices of a graph into two sets, the minimum spanning tree contains the shortest of the edges connecting a vertex in one of the sets to a vertex in the other set. This property tells us that we can start building the MST by selecting any vertex, and always taking next the vertex which is closest to the vertices already on the tree. If more than one "closest" vertex exists, then we can take anyone of these vertices (therefore, a MST of a graph is not unique). Example: Let V1 = {a, b, c, d} , V2 = {e, f, …, m}. Then, the MSP must contain edge fd, because W(fd) = 1. Note that V2 consists of two types of vertices: • Fringe vertices, which are adjacent to V1. • Unseen vertices, which are not adjacent to V1. Extended example to be distributed in class!

  6. Generation of a MST : the Prim's algorithm The idea: Select an arbitrary vertex to start the tree. While there are fringe vertices remaining, select an edge of minimum weight between a tree vertex and a fringe vertex, and add the selected edge and fringe vertex to the tree. Algorithm MST (start, T) Included[start] = true // Assume Boolean array Included tells, for (node = 2) to NumberOfNodes // which vertices are already in the MST. Included[node] = false for (node = 1) to (NumberOf Nodes - 1) { edge = FindMinEdge () // Requires a loop over all of the nodes. Included[edge.IncidentNode()] = true AddEdge(edge, MST) } Efficiency result: Prim's algorithm for generating a MST is O(N^2), where N is the number of nodes in the tree. Since the number of edges is not important it is good for dense graphs.

  7. Generation of a MST : the Kruskal's algorithm The idea: Add edges one at a time selecting at each step the shortest edge that does not form a cycle. Assume that vertices of a MST are initially viewed as one element sets, and edges are arranged in a priority queue according to their weights. Then, we remove edges from the priority queue in order of increasing weights and check if the vertices incident to that edge are already connected. If not, we connect them and this way the disconnected components gradually evolve into a tree -- the minimum spanning tree. Extended example to be distributed in class!

  8. Efficiency result: Assume that • The priority queue is implemented as a heap. • The minimum spanning tree is implemented as a weight-balanced tree. • The graph is implemented by means of adjacency lists. Then: • The initial formation of the priority queue of edges is O(NumberOfEdges*log(NumberOfEdges)) operation. • The phase of removing edges from the queue and performing one or two operations requires also O(NumberOfEdges*log(NumberOfEdges)) time. Therefore, the total efficiency of the Kruskal's algorithm is O(NumberOfEdges*log(NumberOfEdges)).

  9. The shortest-path problem Definition. The weight, or length, of a path v0, v1, v2, …, vk in weighted graph k-1 G = (V, E, W) is  W(vi vi+1). Path v0, v1, v2, …, vk is the shortest path from i = 0 v0 to vk if there is no other path from v0 to vk with lower weight. Definition. The distance from vertex x to vertex y (x, y  V), denoted as d(x,y) is the weight of the shortest path from x to y. The problem: Given x  V, we want to find the shortest paths from x to any other vertex in V in order of increasing distance from x. Consider the following two cases: • All weights are "1". Therefore, the problem becomes finding a path containing the minimum number of edges. To solve this problem, we can use the breadth-first search algorithm. • If edge weights are different, we can use the Dijkstra's shortest path algorithm.

  10. The shortest-path problem: Dijkstra's algorithm Extended example to be distributed in class! To implement Dijkstra's algorithm we need the following data structures: • An integer array, distance, of NumberOfNodes size (assuming that edge weights are integers). • A Node array, path, of NumberOfNodes size. • A Boolean array, included, of NumberOfNodes size. Given the start node, the initialization of these arrays is the following: • included[start] := true, all other entries in included initialized to false. 0, if node = start • distance[node] := EdgeWeight(start, node) , if there does not exist a direct edge between start and node • path[node] := start, if there exists an edge between start and node undefined, otherwise.

  11. Dijkstra's algorithm (contd.) The iteration phase: repeat find the node, j, that is at the minimum distance from start among those not yet included and make included[j] := true for each node, r, not yet included if r is connected by an edge to j, then if distance[j] + EdgeWeight(j, r) < distance[r] then distance[r] := distance[j] + EdgeWeight(j, r) path[r] := j // path contains the immediate predecessor of each node until included[destination_node] := true Efficiency result. If EdgeWeight operation is O(1), then Dijkstra's algorithm is O(NumberOfNodes^2).

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