The P vs. NP problem is one of the fundamental problems of mathematics. It asks whether propositional tautologies can be recognized by a polynomial-time algorithm. The problem would be solved in the negative if one could show that there are propositional tautologies that are very hard to prove, no matter how powerful the proof system you use. This is the foundational problem (the NP vs. coNP problem) of proof complexity, an area linking mathematical logic and computational complexity theory. Written by a leading expert in the field, this book presents a theory for constructing such hard tautologies. It introduces the theory step by step, starting with the historic background and a motivational problem in bounded arithmetic, before taking the reader on a tour of various vistas of the field. Finally, it formulates several research problems to highlight new avenues of research.
Read more
1. Introduction; 2. The dWPHP problem; 3. τ-formulas and generators; 4. The stretch; 5. Nisan-Wigderson generator; 6. Gadget generator; 7. The case of ER; 8. Consistency results; 9. Contexts; 10. Further research; Special symbols; References; Index.
Read more
Discover a state-of-the-art theory aiming to construct hard propositional tautologies needed to solve the NP vs. coNP problem.
Product details
ISBN
9781009611701
Published
2025-06-26
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Weight
210 gr
Height
228 mm
Width
152 mm
Thickness
8 mm
Age
UP, 05
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
134
Author