Consider a Linear Programming problem in dictionary form, <mo movablelimits="true" form="prefix"

Oakey1w

Oakey1w

Answered question

2022-06-23

Consider a Linear Programming problem in dictionary form,
max { f π + j D ( π ) d j π x j   |     i B ( π )       b i π + j D ( π ) G i j π x j 0 ,         j D ( π )     x j 0 } ,
where indices π uniquely define the coefficients of each basic inequality system.
Now assume that the problem is both primal and dual infeasible. Primal infeasibility implies that there always exists a "primal-infeasible" basis α with some r B ( α ) having   b r α < 0 and   j D ( α )     G r j α 0, while dual infeasibility implies that there exists a (possibly different) "dual-infeasible" basis β with some s D ( β ) having   d s β > 0 and   i B ( β )     G i s β 0.
It is easy to construct doubly infeasible problems where both of the above properties appear together at some of its bases, that is, where α = β. But is that true for all doubly infeasible problems? By a case by case analysis, I was able to prove that a counterexample to the existence of such doubly infeasible bases would have at least | D ( π ) | 3 and | B ( π ) | 3.
Does a doubly infeasible problem always have bases that are simultaneously primal-infeasible and dual-infeasible? Alternatively, is there a doubly infeasible problem such that the above two properties do only appear at different bases?

Answer & Explanation

pyphekam

pyphekam

Beginner2022-06-24Added 27 answers

The answer is Yes. A doubly infeasible problem does always have some basis that is both primal infeasible and dual infeasible.

Do you have a similar question?

Recalculate according to your conditions!

Ask your question.
Get an expert answer.

Let our experts help you. Answer in as fast as 15 minutes.

Didn't find what you were looking for?