4,810 research outputs found
The deduction theorem for strong propositional proof systems
This paper focuses on the deduction theorem for propositional logic. We define and investigate different deduction properties and show that the presence of these deduction properties for strong proof systems is powerful enough to characterize the existence of optimal and even polynomially bounded proof systems. We also exhibit a similar, but apparently weaker condition that implies the existence of complete disjoint NP-pairs. In particular, this yields a sufficient condition for the completeness of the canonical pair of Frege systems and provides a general framework for the search for complete NP-pairs
The Deduction Theorem for Strong Propositional Proof Systems
This paper focuses on the deduction theorem for propositional logic. We define and investigate different deduction properties and show that the presence of these deduction properties for strong proof systems is powerful enough to characterize the existence of optimal and even polynomially bounded proof systems. We also exhibit a similar, but apparently weaker condition that implies the existence of complete disjoint NPUnknown control sequence '\mathsf' -pairs. In particular, this yields a sufficient condition for the completeness of the canonical pair of Frege systems and provides a general framework for the search for complete NPUnknown control sequence '\mathsf' -pairs
Positivity Problems for Low-Order Linear Recurrence Sequences
We consider two decision problems for linear recurrence sequences (LRS) over
the integers, namely the Positivity Problem (are all terms of a given LRS
positive?) and the Ultimate Positivity Problem} (are all but finitely many
terms of a given LRS positive?). We show decidability of both problems for LRS
of order 5 or less, with complexity in the Counting Hierarchy for Positivity,
and in polynomial time for Ultimate Positivity. Moreover, we show by way of
hardness that extending the decidability of either problem to LRS of order 6
would entail major breakthroughs in analytic number theory, more precisely in
the field of Diophantine approximation of transcendental numbers
On Recurrent Reachability for Continuous Linear Dynamical Systems
The continuous evolution of a wide variety of systems, including
continuous-time Markov chains and linear hybrid automata, can be described in
terms of linear differential equations. In this paper we study the decision
problem of whether the solution of a system of linear
differential equations reaches a target
halfspace infinitely often. This recurrent reachability problem can
equivalently be formulated as the following Infinite Zeros Problem: does a
real-valued function satisfying a
given linear differential equation have infinitely many zeros? Our main
decidability result is that if the differential equation has order at most ,
then the Infinite Zeros Problem is decidable. On the other hand, we show that a
decision procedure for the Infinite Zeros Problem at order (and above)
would entail a major breakthrough in Diophantine Approximation, specifically an
algorithm for computing the Lagrange constants of arbitrary real algebraic
numbers to arbitrary precision.Comment: Full version of paper at LICS'1
On the Positivity Problem for Simple Linear Recurrence Sequences
Given a linear recurrence sequence (LRS) over the integers, the Positivity
Problem} asks whether all terms of the sequence are positive. We show that, for
simple LRS (those whose characteristic polynomial has no repeated roots) of
order 9 or less, Positivity is decidable, with complexity in the Counting
Hierarchy.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1307.277
Quadratic Word Equations with Length Constraints, Counter Systems, and Presburger Arithmetic with Divisibility
Word equations are a crucial element in the theoretical foundation of
constraint solving over strings, which have received a lot of attention in
recent years. A word equation relates two words over string variables and
constants. Its solution amounts to a function mapping variables to constant
strings that equate the left and right hand sides of the equation. While the
problem of solving word equations is decidable, the decidability of the problem
of solving a word equation with a length constraint (i.e., a constraint
relating the lengths of words in the word equation) has remained a
long-standing open problem. In this paper, we focus on the subclass of
quadratic word equations, i.e., in which each variable occurs at most twice. We
first show that the length abstractions of solutions to quadratic word
equations are in general not Presburger-definable. We then describe a class of
counter systems with Presburger transition relations which capture the length
abstraction of a quadratic word equation with regular constraints. We provide
an encoding of the effect of a simple loop of the counter systems in the theory
of existential Presburger Arithmetic with divisibility (PAD). Since PAD is
decidable, we get a decision procedure for quadratic words equations with
length constraints for which the associated counter system is \emph{flat}
(i.e., all nodes belong to at most one cycle). We show a decidability result
(in fact, also an NP algorithm with a PAD oracle) for a recently proposed
NP-complete fragment of word equations called regular-oriented word equations,
together with length constraints. Decidability holds when the constraints are
additionally extended with regular constraints with a 1-weak control structure.Comment: 18 page
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