Szymanski's conjecture
In mathematics, Szymanski's conjecture, named after Ted H. Szymanski (1989), states that every permutation on the n-dimensional doubly directed hypercube graph can be routed with edge-disjoint paths. That is, if the permutation σ matches each vertex v to another vertex σ(v), then for each v there exists a path in the hypercube graph from v to σ(v) such that no two paths for two different vertices u and v use the same edge in the same direction.
Through computer experiments it has been verified that the conjecture is true for n ≤ 4 (Baudon, Fertin & Havel 2001). Although the conjecture remains open for n ≥ 5, in this case there exist permutations that require the use of paths that are not shortest paths in order to be routed (Lubiw 1990).
References
- Baudon, Olivier; Fertin, Guillaume; Havel, Ivan (2001), "Routing permutations and 2-1 routing requests in the hypercube", Discrete Applied Mathematics, 113 (1): 43–58, doi:10.1016/S0166-218X(00)00386-3.
- Lubiw, Anna (1990), "Counterexample to a conjecture of Szymanski on hypercube routing", Information Processing Letters, 35 (2): 57–61, doi:10.1016/0020-0190(90)90106-8.
- Szymanski, Ted H. (1989), "On the Permutation Capability of a Circuit-Switched Hypercube", Proc. Internat. Conf. on Parallel Processing, 1, Silver Spring, MD: IEEE Computer Society Press, pp. 103–110.
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