21,968 research outputs found
Solving Degenerate Sparse Polynomial Systems Faster
Consider a system F of n polynomial equations in n unknowns, over an
algebraically closed field of arbitrary characteristic. We present a fast
method to find a point in every irreducible component of the zero set Z of F.
Our techniques allow us to sharpen and lower prior complexity bounds for this
problem by fully taking into account the monomial term structure. As a
corollary of our development we also obtain new explicit formulae for the exact
number of isolated roots of F and the intersection multiplicity of the
positive-dimensional part of Z. Finally, we present a combinatorial
construction of non-degenerate polynomial systems, with specified monomial term
structure and maximally many isolated roots, which may be of independent
interest.Comment: This is the final journal version of math.AG/9702222 (``Toric
Generalized Characteristic Polynomials''). This final version is a major
revision with several new theorems, examples, and references. The prior
results are also significantly improve
Dedekind Zeta Functions and the Complexity of Hilbert's Nullstellensatz
Let HN denote the problem of determining whether a system of multivariate
polynomials with integer coefficients has a complex root. It has long been
known that HN in P implies P=NP and, thanks to recent work of Koiran, it is now
known that the truth of the Generalized Riemann Hypothesis (GRH) yields the
implication that HN not in NP implies P is not equal to NP. We show that the
assumption of GRH in the latter implication can be replaced by either of two
more plausible hypotheses from analytic number theory. The first is an
effective short interval Prime Ideal Theorem with explicit dependence on the
underlying field, while the second can be interpreted as a quantitative
statement on the higher moments of the zeroes of Dedekind zeta functions. In
particular, both assumptions can still hold even if GRH is false. We thus
obtain a new application of Dedekind zero estimates to computational algebraic
geometry. Along the way, we also apply recent explicit algebraic and analytic
estimates, some due to Silberman and Sombra, which may be of independent
interest.Comment: 16 pages, no figures. Paper corresponds to a semi-plenary talk at
FoCM 2002. This version corrects some minor typos and adds an
acknowledgements sectio
Toric Intersection Theory for Affine Root Counting
Given any polynomial system with fixed monomial term structure, we give
explicit formulae for the generic number of roots with specified coordinate
vanishing restrictions. For the case of affine space minus an arbitrary union
of coordinate hyperplanes, these formulae are also the tightest possible upper
bounds on the number of isolated roots. We also characterize, in terms of
sparse resultants, precisely when these upper bounds are attained. Finally, we
reformulate and extend some of the prior combinatorial results of the author on
which subsets of coefficients must be chosen generically for our formulae to be
exact.
Our underlying framework provides a new toric variety setting for
computational intersection theory in affine space minus an arbitrary union of
coordinate hyperplanes. We thus show that, at least for root counting, it is
better to work in a naturally associated toric compactification instead of
always resorting to products of projective spaces
Toric Generalized Characteristic Polynomials
We illustrate an efficient new method for handling polynomial systems with
degenerate solution sets. In particular, a corollary of our techniques is a new
algorithm to find an isolated point in every excess component of the zero set
(over an algebraically closed field) of any by system of polynomial
equations. Since we use the sparse resultant, we thus obtain complexity bounds
(for converting any input polynomial system into a multilinear factorization
problem) which are close to cubic in the degree of the underlying variety --
significantly better than previous bounds which were pseudo-polynomial in the
classical B\'ezout bound. By carefully taking into account the underlying toric
geometry, we are also able to improve the reliability of certain sparse
resultant based algorithms for polynomial system solving
Efficiently Detecting Torsion Points and Subtori
Suppose X is the complex zero set of a finite collection of polynomials in
Z[x_1,...,x_n]. We show that deciding whether X contains a point all of whose
coordinates are d_th roots of unity can be done within NP^NP (relative to the
sparse encoding), under a plausible assumption on primes in arithmetic
progression. In particular, our hypothesis can still hold even under certain
failures of the Generalized Riemann Hypothesis, such as the presence of
Siegel-Landau zeroes. Furthermore, we give a similar (but UNconditional)
complexity upper bound for n=1. Finally, letting T be any algebraic subgroup of
(C^*)^n we show that deciding whether X contains T is coNP-complete (relative
to an even more efficient encoding),unconditionally. We thus obtain new
non-trivial families of multivariate polynomial systems where deciding the
existence of complex roots can be done unconditionally in the polynomial
hierarchy -- a family of complexity classes lying between PSPACE and P,
intimately connected with the P=?NP Problem. We also discuss a connection to
Laurent's solution of Chabauty's Conjecture from arithmetic geometry.Comment: 21 pages, no figures. Final version, with additional commentary and
references. Also fixes a gap in Theorems 2 (now Theorem 1.3) regarding
translated subtor
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