Abstract: | Let Tn be a b‐ary tree of height n, which has independent, non‐negative, identically distributed random variables associated with each of its edges, a model previously considered by Karp, Pearl, McDiarmid, and Provan. The value of a node is the sum of all the edge values on its path to the root. Consider the problem of finding the minimum leaf value of Tn. Assume that the edge random variable X is nondegenerate, has E {Xθ}<∞ for some θ>2, and satisfies bP{X=c}<1 where c is the leftmost point of the support of X. We analyze the performance of the standard branch‐and‐bound algorithm for this problem and prove that the number of nodes visited is in probability (β+o(1))n, where β∈(1, b) is a constant depending only on the distribution of the edge random variables. Explicit expressions for β are derived. We also show that any search algorithm must visit (β+o(1))n nodes with probability tending to 1, so branch‐and‐bound is asymptotically optimal where first‐order asymptotics are concerned. ©1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Random Struct. Alg., 14: 309–327, 1999 |