1,030 research outputs found
Complexity of Left-Ideal, Suffix-Closed and Suffix-Free Regular Languages
A language over an alphabet is suffix-convex if, for any words
, whenever and are in , then so is .
Suffix-convex languages include three special cases: left-ideal, suffix-closed,
and suffix-free languages. We examine complexity properties of these three
special classes of suffix-convex regular languages. In particular, we study the
quotient/state complexity of boolean operations, product (concatenation), star,
and reversal on these languages, as well as the size of their syntactic
semigroups, and the quotient complexity of their atoms.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, 1 table. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1605.0669
Linear Parsing Expression Grammars
PEGs were formalized by Ford in 2004, and have several pragmatic operators
(such as ordered choice and unlimited lookahead) for better expressing modern
programming language syntax. Since these operators are not explicitly defined
in the classic formal language theory, it is significant and still challenging
to argue PEGs' expressiveness in the context of formal language theory.Since
PEGs are relatively new, there are several unsolved problems.One of the
problems is revealing a subclass of PEGs that is equivalent to DFAs. This
allows application of some techniques from the theory of regular grammar to
PEGs. In this paper, we define Linear PEGs (LPEGs), a subclass of PEGs that is
equivalent to DFAs. Surprisingly, LPEGs are formalized by only excluding some
patterns of recursive nonterminal in PEGs, and include the full set of ordered
choice, unlimited lookahead, and greedy repetition, which are characteristic of
PEGs. Although the conversion judgement of parsing expressions into DFAs is
undecidable in general, the formalism of LPEGs allows for a syntactical
judgement of parsing expressions.Comment: Parsing expression grammars, Boolean finite automata, Packrat parsin
Stability and Complexity of Minimising Probabilistic Automata
We consider the state-minimisation problem for weighted and probabilistic
automata. We provide a numerically stable polynomial-time minimisation
algorithm for weighted automata, with guaranteed bounds on the numerical error
when run with floating-point arithmetic. Our algorithm can also be used for
"lossy" minimisation with bounded error. We show an application in image
compression. In the second part of the paper we study the complexity of the
minimisation problem for probabilistic automata. We prove that the problem is
NP-hard and in PSPACE, improving a recent EXPTIME-result.Comment: This is the full version of an ICALP'14 pape
Going higher in the First-order Quantifier Alternation Hierarchy on Words
We investigate the quantifier alternation hierarchy in first-order logic on
finite words. Levels in this hierarchy are defined by counting the number of
quantifier alternations in formulas. We prove that one can decide membership of
a regular language to the levels (boolean combination of
formulas having only 1 alternation) and (formulas having only 2
alternations beginning with an existential block). Our proof works by
considering a deeper problem, called separation, which, once solved for lower
levels, allows us to solve membership for higher levels
Completeness and Incompleteness of Synchronous Kleene Algebra
Synchronous Kleene algebra (SKA), an extension of Kleene algebra (KA), was
proposed by Prisacariu as a tool for reasoning about programs that may execute
synchronously, i.e., in lock-step. We provide a countermodel witnessing that
the axioms of SKA are incomplete w.r.t. its language semantics, by exploiting a
lack of interaction between the synchronous product operator and the Kleene
star. We then propose an alternative set of axioms for SKA, based on Salomaa's
axiomatisation of regular languages, and show that these provide a sound and
complete characterisation w.r.t. the original language semantics.Comment: Accepted at MPC 201
Experimental study of the impact of ion orbit losses on the edge radial electric field at the ASDEX Upgrade tokamak
Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (grant FPU17/06273)EUROfusion Consortium 63305
Perturbed Timed Automata
We consider timed automata whose clocks are imperfect. For a given perturbation error 0 \u3c ε \u3c 1, the perturbed language of a timed automaton is obtained by letting its clocks change at a rate within the interval [1 - ε, 1 + ε]. We show that the perturbed language of a timed automaton with a single clock can be captured by a deterministic timed automaton. This leads to a decision procedure for the language inclusion problem for systems modeled as products of 1-clock automata with imperfect clocks. We also prove that determinization and decidability of language inclusion are not possible for multi-clock automata, even with perturbation
Thermal induced structural and magnetic transformations in Fe_{73.5−x}Ce_{x=0,3,5,7}Si_{13.5}B_9Nb_3Cu_1 amorphous alloy
Structural and magnetic properties of amorphous and partly crystallized Fe_{73.5−x}Ce_{x=0,3,5,7}Si_{13.5}B_9Nb_3Cu_1 alloys, were analysed in the temperature ranging from RT to 800 °C with scanning calorimetry and magnetometry. The Fe(Si) and Fe(B) structures were identified and characterised with set of crystallization temperatures and activation energies. Also, Curie temperatures for amorphous and for crystalline structures were determined and analysed as functions of Ce content
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