15 research outputs found

    Progress on Polynomial Identity Testing - II

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    We survey the area of algebraic complexity theory; with the focus being on the problem of polynomial identity testing (PIT). We discuss the key ideas that have gone into the results of the last few years.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure, surve

    Deterministic Factorization of Sparse Polynomials with Bounded Individual Degree

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    In this paper we study the problem of deterministic factorization of sparse polynomials. We show that if fF[x1,x2,,xn]f \in \mathbb{F}[x_{1},x_{2},\ldots ,x_{n}] is a polynomial with ss monomials, with individual degrees of its variables bounded by dd, then ff can be deterministically factored in time spoly(d)logns^{\mathrm{poly}(d) \log n}. Prior to our work, the only efficient factoring algorithms known for this class of polynomials were randomized, and other than for the cases of d=1d=1 and d=2d=2, only exponential time deterministic factoring algorithms were known. A crucial ingredient in our proof is a quasi-polynomial sparsity bound for factors of sparse polynomials of bounded individual degree. In particular we show if ff is an ss-sparse polynomial in nn variables, with individual degrees of its variables bounded by dd, then the sparsity of each factor of ff is bounded by sO(d2logn)s^{O({d^2\log{n}})}. This is the first nontrivial bound on factor sparsity for d>2d>2. Our sparsity bound uses techniques from convex geometry, such as the theory of Newton polytopes and an approximate version of the classical Carath\'eodory's Theorem. Our work addresses and partially answers a question of von zur Gathen and Kaltofen (JCSS 1985) who asked whether a quasi-polynomial bound holds for the sparsity of factors of sparse polynomials

    Deterministically Factoring Sparse Polynomials into Multilinear Factors and Sums of Univariate Polynomials

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    We present the first efficient deterministic algorithm for factoring sparse polynomials that split into multilinear factors and sums of univariate polynomials. Our result makes partial progress towards the resolution of the classical question posed by von zur Gathen and Kaltofen in [von zur Gathen/Kaltofen, J. Comp. Sys. Sci., 1985] to devise an efficient deterministic algorithm for factoring (general) sparse polynomials. We achieve our goal by introducing essential factorization schemes which can be thought of as a relaxation of the regular factorization notion

    Towards Toric Absolute Factorization

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    International audienceThis article gives an algorithm to recover the absolute factorization of a bivariate polynomial, taking into account the geometry of its monomials. It is based on algebraic criterions inherited from algebraic interpolation and toric geometry

    Factors of Low Individual Degree Polynomials

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    In [Kaltofen, 1989], Kaltofen proved the remarkable fact that multivariate polynomial factorization can be done efficiently, in randomized polynomial time. Still, more than twenty years after Kaltofen\u27s work, many questions remain unanswered regarding the complexity aspects of polynomial factorization, such as the question of whether factors of polynomials efficiently computed by arithmetic formulas also have small arithmetic formulas, asked in [Kopparty/Saraf/Shpilka,CCC\u2714], and the question of bounding the depth of the circuits computing the factors of a polynomial. We are able to answer these questions in the affirmative for the interesting class of polynomials of bounded individual degrees, which contains polynomials such as the determinant and the permanent. We show that if P(x_1, ..., x_n) is a polynomial with individual degrees bounded by r that can be computed by a formula of size s and depth d, then any factor f(x_1, ..., x_n) of P(x_1, ..., x_n) can be computed by a formula of size poly((rn)^r, s) and depth d+5. This partially answers the question above posed in [Kopparty/Saraf/Shpilka,CCC\u2714], that asked if this result holds without the exponential dependence on r. Our work generalizes the main factorization theorem from Dvir et al. [Dvir/Shpilka/Yehudayoff,SIAM J. Comp., 2009], who proved it for the special case when the factors are of the form f(x_1, ..., x_n) = x_n - g(x_1, ..., x_n-1). Along the way, we introduce several new technical ideas that could be of independent interest when studying arithmetic circuits (or formulas)

    On Some Computations on Sparse Polynomials

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    In arithmetic circuit complexity the standard operations are +,x. Yet, in some scenarios exponentiation gates are considered as well. In this paper we study the question of efficiently evaluating a polynomial given an oracle access to its power. Among applications, we show that: * A reconstruction algorithm for a circuit class c can be extended to handle f^e for f in C. * There exists an efficient deterministic algorithm for factoring sparse multiquadratic polynomials. * There is a deterministic algorithm for testing a factorization of sparse polynomials, with constant individual degrees, into sparse irreducible factors. That is, testing if f = g_1 x ... x g_m when f has constant individual degrees and g_i-s are irreducible. * There is a deterministic reconstruction algorithm for multilinear depth-4 circuits with two multiplication gates. * There exists an efficient deterministic algorithm for testing whether two powers of sparse polynomials are equal. That is, f^d = g^e when f and g are sparse

    On Solving Sparse Polynomial Factorization Related Problems

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    Feasible arithmetic computations: Valiant's hypothesis

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    An account of Valiant's theory of p-computable versus p-definable polynomials, an arithmetic analogue of the Boolean theory of P versus NP, is presented, with detailed proofs of Valiant's central results

    Survey of polynomial factorisation algorithms

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    Prediction based task scheduling in distributed computing

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