We study cellular automata where the state at each site is decided by a
majority vote of the sites in its neighborhood. These are equivalent, for a
restricted set of initial conditions, to non-zero probability transitions in
single spin-flip dynamics of the Ising model at zero temperature.
We show that in three or more dimensions these systems can simulate Boolean
circuits of AND and OR gates, and are therefore P-complete. That is, predicting
their state t time-steps in the future is at least as hard as any other problem
that takes polynomial time on a serial computer.
Therefore, unless a widely believed conjecture in computer science is false,
it is impossible even with parallel computation to predict majority-vote
cellular automata, or zero-temperature single spin-flip Ising dynamics,
qualitatively faster than by explicit simulation.Comment: 10 pages with figure