Research Seminars @ Illinois

Tailored for undergraduate researchers, this calendar is a curated list of research seminars at the University of Illinois. Explore the diverse world of research and expand your knowledge through engaging sessions designed to inspire and enlighten.

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Theory Seminar: Annie Zeng, "Packing Steiner Forests in Graphs."

Apr 6, 2026   11:00 am - 12:00 pm  
3401 Siebel Center
Sponsor
Theory and Algorithms Research Area
Speaker
Annie Zeng
Contact
Makrand Sinha
E-Mail
msinha@illinois.edu
Views
1
Originating Calendar
Siebel School Speakers Calendar

Abstract:    We consider the problem of packing edge-disjoint Steiner forests in a graph. The input consists of a multi-graph G=(V,E) and a collection of h vertex subsets S={S1,S2,…,Sh}. A Steiner forest for S, also called an S-forest, is a forest of G in which each Si is connected. In the case where h=1, this is the Steiner Tree packing problem. Kriesell's conjecture postulates that 2k-edge-connectivity of S1 is sufficient to find k edge-disjoint S1-trees. Lau showed that 24k-edge-connectivity suffices for the Steiner Tree packing problem, which was improved to 6.5k by West and Wu and 5k+4 by Devos, McDonald and Pivotto.

In his thesis, Lau asserts that for the Steiner Forest problem, if each Si is 30k-edge-connected in G, then there exist k edge-disjoint S-forests. However, Lau's proof relies on an intermediate theorem called the Extension Theorem, which has a gap in the proof, as evidenced by a counterexample we found to this theorem. In this talk, I will explain the mistake in Lau's proof, and how we fixed it to obtain the result that 36k-edge-connectivity of each Si suffices to pack k S-forests. 

This work was done as my undergraduate thesis, which was supervised by Chandra Chekuri.

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