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Branch-and-Bound Technique for Solving Integer Programs. In this handout Basic concepts Introducing the technique based on an example. Basic Concepts. The basic concept underlying the branch-and-bound technique is to divide and conquer .
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Branch-and-Bound Technique for Solving Integer Programs In this handout Basic concepts Introducing the technique based on an example
Basic Concepts The basic concept underlying the branch-and-bound technique is to divide and conquer. Since the original “large” problem is hard to solve directly, it is divided into smaller and smaller subproblems until these subproblems can be conquered. The dividing (branching) is done by partitioning the entire set of feasible solutions into smaller and smaller subsets. The conquering (fathoming) is done partially by (i) giving a bound for the best solution in the subset; (ii) discarding the subset if the bound indicates that it can’t contain an optimal solution. These three basic steps – branching, bounding, and fathoming – are illustrated on the following example.
6 Example of Branch-and-Bound x1 + x2= 6 5 Max Z = 5x1 + 8x2 s.t. x1 + x2 6 5x1 + 9x2 45 x1 , x2≥ 0 integer 4 (2.25, 3.75) 3 Z=41.25 2 5x1 + 9x2= 45 1 Z=20 0 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6
Utilizing the information about the optimal solution of the LP-relaxation • Fact: If LP-relaxation has integral optimal solution x*, then x* is optimal for IP too. • In our case, (x1, x2) = (2.25, 3.75) is the optimal solution of the LP-relaxation. But, unfortunately, it is not integral. • The optimal value is 41.25 . • Fact: OPT(LP-relaxation) ≥ OPT(IP) (for maximization problems) That is, the optimal value of the LP-relaxation is an upper bound for the optimal value of the integer program. • In our case, 41.25 is an upper bound for OPT(IP).
Branching step • In an attempt to find out more about the location of the IP’s optimal solution, partition the feasible region of the LP-relaxation. • Choose a variable that is fractional in the optimal solution to the LP-relaxation – say, x2 . Observe that every feasible IP point must have either x2 3 or x2 ≥ 4 . • With this in mind, branch on the variable x2to create the following two subproblems: Subproblem 1 Subproblem 2 Max Z = 5x1 + 8x2 Max Z = 5x1 + 8x2 s.t. x1 + x2 6 s.t. x1 + x2 6 5x1 + 9x2 45 5x1 + 9x2 45 x2 3 x2 ≥ 4 x1 , x2≥ 0 x1 , x2≥ 0 • Solve both subproblems (note that the original optimal solution (2.25, 3.75) can’t recur)
Branching step (graphically) Z=41 5 Subproblem 1: Opt. solution (3,3) with value 39 Subproblem 2: Opt. solution (1.8,4) with value 41 Subproblem 2 4 (1.8, 4) 3 (3, 3) 2 Subproblem 1 1 Z=39 Z=20 0 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6
Solution tree S1: x2 3 (3, 3) Z=39 int. All (2.25, 3.75) Z=41.25 S2: x2≥ 4 (1.8, 4) Z=41 For each subproblem, we record • the restriction that creates the subproblem • the optimal LP solution • the LP optimum value The optimal solution for Subproblem 1 is integral: (3, 3). • If further branching on a subproblem will yield no useful information, then we can fathom (dismiss) the subproblem. In our case, we can fathom Subproblem 1 because its solution is integral. • The best integer solution found so far is stored as incumbent. The value of the incumbent is denoted by Z*. In our case, the first incumbent is (3, 3),and Z*=39. • Z* is a lower bound for OPT(IP): OPT(IP) ≥ Z* . In our case, OPT(IP) ≥ 39. The upper bound is 41: OPT(IP) 41.
Z=20 Next branching step (graphically) 5 (1, 4.44) Subpr. 4 - Fathom Subproblem 1. - Branch Subproblem 2 on x1 : Subproblem 3: New restriction is x1 1. Opt. solution (1, 4.44) with value 40.55 Subproblem 4: New restriction is x1≥ 2. The subproblem is infeasible Subpr. 3 4 3 Z=40.55 2 1 0 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6
Solution tree (cont.) S1: x2 3 (3, 3) Z=39 int. All (2.25, 3.75) Z=41.25 S3: x1 1 (1, 4.44) Z=40.55 • If a subproblem is infeasible, then it is fathomed. In our case, Subproblem 4 is infeasible; fathom it. • The upper bound for OPT(IP) is updated: 39OPT(IP) 40.55 . • Next branch Subproblem 3 on x2 . (Note that the branching variable might recur). S2: x2≥ 4 (1.8, 4) Z=41 S4: x1≥ 2 infeasible
Z=20 Next branching step (graphically) (0, 5) 5 Branch Subproblem 3 on x2 : Subproblem 5: New restriction is x2 4. Feasible region: the segment joining (0,4) and (1,4) Opt. solution (1, 4) with value 37 Subproblem 6: New restriction is x2≥ 5. Feasible region is just one point: (0, 5) Opt. solution (0, 5) with value 40 4 (1, 4) 3 2 1 0 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6
Solution tree (final) S1: x2 3 (3, 3) Z=39 int. S5: x2 4 (1, 4) Z=37 int. All (2.25, 3.75) Z=41.25 S3: x1 1 (1, 4.44) Z=40.55 • If the optimal value of a subproblem is Z*, then it is fathomed. • In our case, Subproblem 5 is fathomed because 37 39 = Z*. • If a subproblem has integral optimal solution x*, and its value > Z*, then x* replaces the current incumbent. • In our case, Subproblem 5 has integral optimal solution, and its value 40>39=Z*. Thus, (0,5) is the new incumbent, and new Z*=40. • If there are no unfathomed subproblems left, then the current incumbent is an optimal solution for (IP). • In our case, (0, 5) is an optimal solution with optimal value 40. S2: x2≥ 4 (1.8, 4) Z=41 S6: x2≥ 5 (0, 5) Z=40 int. S4: x1≥ 2 infeasible
In the next handout • Summary of branch-and-bound for integer programs • Which variable to branch on? • Which open subproblem to solve first? • Updating the bounds (lower and upper) on OPT(IP) • Summary of fathoming criteria • Optimality test • Branch-and-bound applied to • binary integer programs • mixed integer programs