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Minimizing the number of lattice points in a translated polygon

Abstract

The parametric lattice-point counting problem is as follows: Given an integer matrix AZm×nA \in Z^{m \times n}, compute an explicit formula parameterized by bRmb \in R^m that determines the number of integer points in the polyhedron {xRn:Axb}\{x \in R^n : Ax \leq b\}. In the last decade, this counting problem has received considerable attention in the literature. Several variants of Barvinok's algorithm have been shown to solve this problem in polynomial time if the number nn of columns of AA is fixed. Central to our investigation is the following question: Can one also efficiently determine a parameter bb such that the number of integer points in {xRn:Axb}\{x \in R^n : Ax \leq b\} is minimized? Here, the parameter bb can be chosen from a given polyhedron QRmQ \subseteq R^m. Our main result is a proof that finding such a minimizing parameter is NPNP-hard, even in dimension 2 and even if the parametrization reflects a translation of a 2-dimensional convex polygon. This result is established via a relationship of this problem to arithmetic progressions and simultaneous Diophantine approximation. On the positive side we show that in dimension 2 there exists a polynomial time algorithm for each fixed kk that either determines a minimizing translation or asserts that any translation contains at most 1+1/k1 + 1/k times the minimal number of lattice points

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