5 research outputs found
The Computational Complexity of Integer Programming with Alternations
We prove that integer programming with three alternating quantifiers is NP-complete, even for a fixed number of variables. This complements earlier results by Lenstra and Kannan, which together say that integer programming with at most two alternating quantifiers can be done in polynomial time for a fixed number of variables. As a byproduct of the proof, we show that for two polytopes P, Q in R^4, counting the projection of integer points in QP is #P-complete. This contrasts the 2003 result by Barvinok and Woods, which allows counting in polynomial time the projection of integer points in P and Q separately
Complexity of short Presburger arithmetic
We study complexity of short sentences in Presburger arithmetic (Short-PA).
Here by "short" we mean sentences with a bounded number of variables,
quantifiers, inequalities and Boolean operations; the input consists only of
the integers involved in the inequalities. We prove that assuming Kannan's
partition can be found in polynomial time, the satisfiability of Short-PA
sentences can be decided in polynomial time. Furthermore, under the same
assumption, we show that the numbers of satisfying assignments of short
Presburger sentences can also be computed in polynomial time