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Strong duality

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Strong duality is a condition in mathematical optimization in which the primal optimal objective and the dual optimal objective are equal. By definition, strong duality holds if and only if the duality gap is equal to 0. This is opposed to weak duality (the primal problem has optimal value smaller than or equal to the dual problem, in other words the duality gap is greater than or equal to zero).

Sufficient conditions

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Each of the following conditions is sufficient for strong duality to hold:

Strong duality and computational complexity

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Under certain conditions (called "constraint qualification"), if a problem is polynomial-time solvable, then it has strong duality (in the sense of Lagrangian duality). It is an open question whether the opposite direction also holds, that is, if strong duality implies polynomial-time solvability.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Borwein, Jonathan; Lewis, Adrian (2006). Convex Analysis and Nonlinear Optimization: Theory and Examples (2 ed.). Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-29570-1.
  2. ^ Boyd, Stephen; Vandenberghe, Lieven (2004). Convex Optimization (PDF). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-83378-3. Retrieved October 3, 2011.
  3. ^ Manyem, Prabhu (2010). "Duality Gap, Computational Complexity and NP Completeness: A Survey". arXiv:1012.5568 [math.OC].