Hardness of approximation
In computer science, hardness of approximation is a field that studies the algorithmic complexity of finding near-optimal solutions to optimization problems.
Scope
Hardness of approximation complements the study of approximation algorithms by proving, for certain problems, a limit on the factors with which their solution can be efficiently approximated. Typically such limits show a factor of approximation beyond which a problem becomes NP-hard, implying that finding a polynomial time approximation for the problem is impossible unless NP=P. Some hardness of approximation results, however, are based on other hypotheses, a notable one among which is the unique games conjecture.
History
Since the early 1970s it was known that many optimization problems could not be solved in polynomial time unless P = NP, but in many of these problems the optimal solution could be efficiently approximated to a certain degree. In the 1970s, Teofilo F. Gonzalez and Sartaj Sahni began the study of hardness of approximation, by showing that certain optimization problems were NP-hard even to approximate to within a given approximation ratio. That is, for these problems, there is a threshold such that any polynomial-time approximation with approximation ratio beyond this threshold could be used to solve NP-complete problems in polynomial time.[1] In the early 1990s, with the development of PCP theory, it became clear that many more approximation problems were hard to approximate, and that (unless P = NP) many known approximation algorithms achieved the best possible approximation ratio.
Hardness of approximation theory deals with studying the approximation threshold of such problems.
Examples
For an example of an NP-hard optimization problem that is hard to approximate, see set cover.
See also
References
- ↑ Sahni, Sartaj; Gonzalez, Teofilo (1976), "P-complete approximation problems", Journal of the ACM, 23 (3): 555–565, MR 0408313, doi:10.1145/321958.321975.
Further reading
- Trevisan, Luca (July 27, 2004), Inapproximability of Combinatorial Optimization Problems (PDF)
External links
- CSE 533: The PCP Theorem and Hardness of Approximation, Autumn 2005, syllabus from the University of Washington, Venkatesan Guruswami and Ryan O'Donnell