Steiner Trees in Industry: 11 (Combinatorial Optimization, 11) - Hardcover

 
9781402000997: Steiner Trees in Industry: 11 (Combinatorial Optimization, 11)

Synopsis

This book is a collection of articles studying various Steiner tree prob­ lems with applications in industries, such as the design of electronic cir­ cuits, computer networking, telecommunication, and perfect phylogeny. The Steiner tree problem was initiated in the Euclidean plane. Given a set of points in the Euclidean plane, the shortest network interconnect­ ing the points in the set is called the Steiner minimum tree. The Steiner minimum tree may contain some vertices which are not the given points. Those vertices are called Steiner points while the given points are called terminals. The shortest network for three terminals was first studied by Fermat (1601-1665). Fermat proposed the problem of finding a point to minimize the total distance from it to three terminals in the Euclidean plane. The direct generalization is to find a point to minimize the total distance from it to n terminals, which is still called the Fermat problem today. The Steiner minimum tree problem is an indirect generalization. Schreiber in 1986 found that this generalization (i.e., the Steiner mini­ mum tree) was first proposed by Gauss.

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Synopsis

This volume is a collection of 16 articles contributed by influential experts in the field of Steiner tree applications. The articles are designed to explore the impact on industries of the long-term theoretical development of Steiner tree problems. The authors address various Steiner tree problems originating from and applied to industry fields, such as the design of electronic circuits, telecommunication networks, computer networks, and computer biology. This book should be a good reference tool for scientists who depend on Steiner tree problems in some way.

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