IEOR 6614
Spring 2014

Optimization II

Professor Cliff Stein

From the course textbook:
Network flows is an exciting field that brings together what many students, practitioners, and researchers like best about the mathematical and computational sciences. It couples deep intellectual content with a remarkable range of applicability, covering literally thousands of applications in such wide-ranging fields as chemistry and physics, computer networking, most branches of engineering, manufacturing, public policy and social systems, scheduling and routing, telecommunications, and transportation. It is classical, dating from the work of Gustav Kirchhoff, and other eminent physical scientists of the last century, and yet vibrant and current, bursting with new results and new approaches.

This class will cover algorithms for network flow and related problems. We will cover both classical results and modern state-of-the-art algorithms for a number of network flow problems including the shortest paths, maximum flow, minimum cut, minimum cost flow, matching and multicommodity flow problems. The focus will be on learning about a number of different algorithmic techniques that have proved fruitful in this, and other areas. We will also discuss applications and related problems.

Information


Homework


Handouts


Course Announcements

  • No class on Tuesday, March 11.
  • The midterm will be on Thursday, March 13, 11:40 AM - 1:45 PM in the normal classroom. You can bring the course textbook and class notes.
  • No class on Tuesday, April 1 and Thursday, April 3.
  • Makeup class on Friday, April 11 from 10AM to noon in 317 Mudd.
  • Final will be available at 9AM on May 13 and due at 5PM on May 15.