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Mimicking Networks Parameterized by Connectivity

Given a graph $G=(V,E)$, capacities $w(e)$ on edges, and a subset of terminals $\mathcal{T} \subseteq V: |\mathcal{T}| = k$, a mimicking network for $(G,\mathcal{T})$ is a graph $(H,w')$ that contains copies of $\mathcal{T}$ and preserves the value of minimum cuts separating any subset $A, B \subseteq \mathcal{T}$ of terminals. Mimicking networks of size $2^{2^k}$ are known to exist and can be constructed algorithmically, while the best known lower bound is $2^{Ω(k)}$; therefore, an exponential size is required if one aims at preserving cuts exactly. In this paper, we study mimicking networks that preserve connectivity of the graph exactly up to the value of $c$, where $c$ is a parameter. This notion of mimicking network is sufficient for some applications, as we will elaborate. We first show that a mimicking of size $3^c \cdot k$ exists, that is, we can preserve cuts with small capacity using a network of size linear in $k$. Next, we show an algorithm that finds such a mimicking network in time $2^{O(c^2)} \operatorname{poly}(m)$.

preprint2019arXivOpen access
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