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| Content Provider | Springer Nature Link |
|---|---|
| Author | Feige, Uriel Scheideler, Christian |
| Copyright Year | 2002 |
| Abstract | In acyclic job shop scheduling problems there are n jobs and m machines. Each job is composed of a sequence of operations to be performed on different machines. A legal schedule is one in which within each job, operations are carried out in order, and each machine performs at most one operation in any unit of time. If D denotes the length of the longest job, and C denotes the number of time units requested by all jobs on the most loaded machine, then clearly lb = max[C,D] is a lower bound on the length of the shortest legal schedule. A celebrated result of Leighton, Maggs, and Rao shows that if all operations are of unit length, then there always is a legal schedule of length O(lb), independent of n and m. For the case that operations may have different lengths, Shmoys, Stein and Wein showed that there always is a legal schedule of length , where the notation is used to suppress terms. We improve the upper bound to . We also show that our new upper bound is essentially best possible, by proving the existence of instances of acyclic job shop scheduling for which the shortest legal schedule is of length . This resolves (negatively) a known open problem of whether the linear upper bound of Leighton, Maggs, and Rao applies to arbitrary job shop scheduling instances (without the restriction to acyclicity and unit length operations). |
| Starting Page | 361 |
| Ending Page | 399 |
| Page Count | 39 |
| File Format | |
| ISSN | 02099683 |
| Journal | Combinatorica |
| Volume Number | 22 |
| Issue Number | 3 |
| e-ISSN | 14396912 |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Bolyai Society – Springer-Verlag |
| Publisher Date | 2002-07-01 |
| Publisher Place | Budapest |
| Access Restriction | One Nation One Subscription (ONOS) |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |
| Subject | Discrete Mathematics and Combinatorics Computational Mathematics |
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