In this paper, we consider two fundamental cut approximation problems on large graphs. We prove new lower bounds for both problems that are optimal up to logarithmic factors. The first problem is to approximate cuts in balanced directed graphs. In this problem, the goal is to build a data structure that -approximates cut values in graphs with vertices. For arbitrary directed graphs, such a data structure requires bits even for constant . To circumvent this, recent works study -balanced graphs, meaning that for every directed cut, the total weight of edges in one direction is at most times that in the other direction. We consider two models: the model, where the goal is to approximate each cut with constant probability, and the model, where all cuts must be preserved simultaneously. We improve the previous lower bound to in the for-each model, and we improve the previous lower bound to in the for-all model. This resolves the main open questions of (Cen et al., ICALP, 2021). The second problem is to approximate the global minimum cut in a local query model, where we can only access the graph via degree, edge, and adjacency queries. We improve the previous query complexity lower bound to for this problem, where is the number of edges, is the size of the minimum cut, and we seek a -approximation. In addition, we show that existing upper bounds with slight modifications match our lower bound up to logarithmic factors.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11576265PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3651148DOI Listing

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