On the Complexity of CSP-based Ideal Membership Problems

November 07, 2020 ยท The Ethereal ยท ๐Ÿ› Symposium on the Theory of Computing

๐Ÿ”ฎ THE ETHEREAL: The Ethereal
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Authors Andrei A. Bulatov, Akbar Rafiey arXiv ID 2011.03700 Category cs.CC: Computational Complexity Cross-listed cs.DS, cs.LO, math.AC, math.AG Citations 7 Venue Symposium on the Theory of Computing Last Checked 2 months ago
Abstract
In this paper we consider the Ideal Membership Problem (IMP for short), in which we are given real polynomials $f_0,f_1,\dots, f_k$ and the question is to decide whether $f_0$ belongs to the ideal generated by $f_1,\dots,f_k$. In the more stringent version the task is also to find a proof of this fact. The IMP underlies many proof systems based on polynomials such as Nullstellensatz, Polynomial Calculus, and Sum-of-Squares. In the majority of such applications the IMP involves so called combinatorial ideals that arise from a variety of discrete combinatorial problems. This restriction makes the IMP significantly easier and in some cases allows for an efficient algorithm to solve it. The first part of this paper follows the work of Mastrolilli [SODA'19] who initiated a systematic study of IMPs arising from Constraint Satisfaction Problems (CSP) of the form $CSP(ฮ“)$, that is, CSPs in which the type of constraints is limited to relations from a set $ฮ“$. We show that many CSP techniques can be translated to IMPs thus allowing us to significantly improve the methods of studying the complexity of the IMP. We also develop universal algebraic techniques for the IMP that have been so useful in the study of the CSP. This allows us to prove a general necessary condition for the tractability of the IMP, and three sufficient ones. The sufficient conditions include IMPs arising from systems of linear equations over $GF(p)$, $p$ prime, and also some conditions defined through special kinds of polymorphisms. Our work has several consequences and applications in terms of bit complexity of sum-of-squares (SOS) proofs and their automatizability, and studying (construction of) theta bodies of combinatorial problems.
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