Ishan Bansal

2papers

2 Papers

78.1DSApr 6
Improved Approximation Algorithms for Capacitated Network Design and Flexible Graph Connectivity

Ishan Bansal, Joseph Cheriyan, Sanjeev Khanna et al.

We present improved approximation algorithms for some problems in the related areas of Capacitated Network Design and Flexible Graph Connectivity. In the Cap-$k$-ECSS problem, we are given a graph $G=(V,E)$ whose edges have non-negative costs and positive integer capacities, and the goal is to find a minimum-cost edge-set $F$ such that every non-trivial cut of the graph $G'=(V,F)$ has capacity at least $k$. We present an $O(\log k)$-approximation algorithm for the Cap-$k$-ECSS problem, asymptotically improving upon the previous best approximation ratio of $\min(O(\log n),\; O(k))$ whenever $\log(k)=o(\log n)$, where $n$ denotes $|V|$. (See section 1, for a detailed discussion.) In the $(p,q)$-Flexible Graph Connectivity problem, denoted $(p,q)$-FGC, the input is a graph $G(V, E)$ where $E$ is partitioned into safe and unsafe edges, and the goal is to find a minimum cost set of edges $F$ such that the subgraph $G'(V, F)$ remains $p$-edge connected upon removal of any $q$ unsafe edges from $F$. We design a $7$-approximation algorithm for the $(1,q)$-FGC problem, improving on the previous best approximation ratio of $(q+1)$. Both of our results are obtained by using natural LP relaxations strengthened with the knapsack-cover inequalities, and then, during the rounding process, utilizing a recent $O(1)$-approximation algorithm for the Cover$\;$Small$\;$Cuts problem. In the latter problem, the goal is to find a minimum-cost set of links such that each non-trivial cut of capacity less than a specified value is covered by a link. We also show that the problem of covering small cuts inherently arises in another variant of $(p,q)$-FGC. Specifically, we give Cook reductions that preserve approximation ratios within $O(1)$ factors between the $(2,q)$-FGC problem and the 2-Cover$\;$Small$\;$Cuts problem; in the latter problem, each small cut needs to be covered by two links.

DSJun 26, 2025
Parallel Token Swapping for Qubit Routing

Ishan Bansal, Oktay Günlük, Richard Shapley

In this paper we study a combinatorial reconfiguration problem that involves finding an optimal sequence of swaps to move an initial configuration of tokens that are placed on the vertices of a graph to a final desired one. This problem arises as a crucial step in reducing the depth of a quantum circuit when compiling a quantum algorithm. We provide the first known constant factor approximation algorithms for the parallel token swapping problem on graph topologies that are commonly found in modern quantum computers, including cycle graphs, subdivided star graphs, and grid graphs. We also study the so-called stretch factor of a natural lower bound to the problem, which has been shown to be useful when designing heuristics for the qubit routing problem. Finally, we study the colored version of this reconfiguration problem where some tokens share the same color and are considered indistinguishable.