Approximate Hypergraph Vertex Cover and generalized Tuza's conjecture
A famous conjecture of Tuza states that the minimum number of edges needed to cover all the triangles in a graph is at most twice the maximum number of edge-disjoint triangles. This conjecture was couched in a broader setting by Aharoni and Zerbib who proposed a hypergraph version of this conjecture, and also studied its implied fractional versions. We establish the fractional version of the Aharoni-Zerbib conjecture up to lower order terms. Specifically, we give a factor t/2+ O(√(t log t)) approximation based on LP rounding for an algorithmic version of the hypergraph Turán problem (AHTP). The objective in AHTP is to pick the smallest collection of (t-1)-sized subsets of vertices of an input t-uniform hypergraph such that every hyperedge contains one of these subsets. Aharoni and Zerbib also posed whether Tuza's conjecture and its hypergraph versions could follow from non-trivial duality gaps between vertex covers and matchings on hypergraphs that exclude certain sub-hypergraphs, for instance, a "tent" structure that cannot occur in the incidence of triangles and edges. We give a strong negative answer to this question, by exhibiting tent-free hypergraphs, and indeed ℱ-free hypergraphs for any finite family ℱ of excluded sub-hypergraphs, whose vertex covers must include almost all the vertices. The algorithmic questions arising in the above study can be phrased as instances of vertex cover on simple hypergraphs, whose hyperedges can pairwise share at most one vertex. We prove that the trivial factor t approximation for vertex cover is hard to improve for simple t-uniform hypergraphs. However, for set cover on simple n-vertex hypergraphs, the greedy algorithm achieves a factor (ln n)/2, better than the optimal ln n factor for general hypergraphs.
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