144 research outputs found

    Combinatorial complexity in o-minimal geometry

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    In this paper we prove tight bounds on the combinatorial and topological complexity of sets defined in terms of nn definable sets belonging to some fixed definable family of sets in an o-minimal structure. This generalizes the combinatorial parts of similar bounds known in the case of semi-algebraic and semi-Pfaffian sets, and as a result vastly increases the applicability of results on combinatorial and topological complexity of arrangements studied in discrete and computational geometry. As a sample application, we extend a Ramsey-type theorem due to Alon et al., originally proved for semi-algebraic sets of fixed description complexity to this more general setting.Comment: 25 pages. Revised version. To appear in the Proc. London Math. So

    Computing the First Few Betti Numbers of Semi-algebraic Sets in Single Exponential Time

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    In this paper we describe an algorithm that takes as input a description of a semi-algebraic set SβŠ‚RkS \subset \R^k, defined by a Boolean formula with atoms of the form P>0,P<0,P=0P > 0, P < 0, P=0 for P∈PβŠ‚R[X1,...,Xk],P \in {\mathcal P} \subset \R[X_1,...,X_k], and outputs the first β„“+1\ell+1 Betti numbers of SS, b0(S),...,bβ„“(S).b_0(S),...,b_\ell(S). The complexity of the algorithm is (sd)kO(β„“),(sd)^{k^{O(\ell)}}, where where s = #({\mathcal P}) and d=max⁑P∈Pdeg(P),d = \max_{P\in {\mathcal P}}{\rm deg}(P), which is singly exponential in kk for β„“\ell any fixed constant. Previously, singly exponential time algorithms were known only for computing the Euler-Poincar\'e characteristic, the zero-th and the first Betti numbers

    A complex analogue of Toda's Theorem

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    Toda \cite{Toda} proved in 1989 that the (discrete) polynomial time hierarchy, PH\mathbf{PH}, is contained in the class \mathbf{P}^{#\mathbf{P}}, namely the class of languages that can be decided by a Turing machine in polynomial time given access to an oracle with the power to compute a function in the counting complexity class #\mathbf{P}. This result, which illustrates the power of counting is considered to be a seminal result in computational complexity theory. An analogous result (with a compactness hypothesis) in the complexity theory over the reals (in the sense of Blum-Shub-Smale real machines \cite{BSS89}) was proved in \cite{BZ09}. Unlike Toda's proof in the discrete case, which relied on sophisticated combinatorial arguments, the proof in \cite{BZ09} is topological in nature in which the properties of the topological join is used in a fundamental way. However, the constructions used in \cite{BZ09} were semi-algebraic -- they used real inequalities in an essential way and as such do not extend to the complex case. In this paper, we extend the techniques developed in \cite{BZ09} to the complex projective case. A key role is played by the complex join of quasi-projective complex varieties. As a consequence we obtain a complex analogue of Toda's theorem. The results contained in this paper, taken together with those contained in \cite{BZ09}, illustrate the central role of the Poincar\'e polynomial in algorithmic algebraic geometry, as well as, in computational complexity theory over the complex and real numbers -- namely, the ability to compute it efficiently enables one to decide in polynomial time all languages in the (compact) polynomial hierarchy over the appropriate field.Comment: 31 pages. Final version to appear in Foundations of Computational Mathematic

    Efficient algorithms for computing the Euler-Poincar\'e characteristic of symmetric semi-algebraic sets

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    Let R\mathrm{R} be a real closed field and DβŠ‚R\mathrm{D} \subset \mathrm{R} an ordered domain. We consider the algorithmic problem of computing the generalized Euler-Poincar\'e characteristic of real algebraic as well as semi-algebraic subsets of Rk\mathrm{R}^k, which are defined by symmetric polynomials with coefficients in D\mathrm{D}. We give algorithms for computing the generalized Euler-Poincar\'e characteristic of such sets, whose complexities measured by the number the number of arithmetic operations in D\mathrm{D}, are polynomially bounded in terms of kk and the number of polynomials in the input, assuming that the degrees of the input polynomials are bounded by a constant. This is in contrast to the best complexity of the known algorithms for the same problems in the non-symmetric situation, which are singly exponential. This singly exponential complexity for the latter problem is unlikely to be improved because of hardness result (#P\#\mathbf{P}-hardness) coming from discrete complexity theory.Comment: 29 pages, 1 Figure. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1312.658
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