The Volume on Advances in Steiner Trees is divided into two
sections. The first section of the book includes papers on the
general geometric Steiner tree problem in the plane and higher
dimensions. The second section of the book includes papers on the
Steiner problem on graphs. The general geometric Steiner tree
problem assumes that you have a given set of points in some
d-dimensional space and you wish to connect the given points with
the shortest network possible. The given set ofpoints are 3 Figure
1: Euclidean Steiner Problem in E usually referred to as terminals
and the set ofpoints that may be added to reduce the overall length
of the network are referred to as Steiner points. What makes the
problem difficult is that we do not know a priori the location and
cardinality ofthe number ofSteiner points. Thus)the problem on the
Euclidean metric is not known to be in NP and has not been shown to
be NP-Complete. It is thus a very difficult NP-Hard problem.
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