Complexity theory of orbit closure intersection for tensors: reductions, completeness, and graph isomorphism hardness
Many natural computational problems in computer science, mathematics, physics, and other sciences amount to deciding if two objects are equivalent. Often this equivalence is defined in terms of group actions. A natural question is to ask when two objects can be distinguished by polynomial functions...
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Zusammenfassung: | Many natural computational problems in computer science, mathematics,
physics, and other sciences amount to deciding if two objects are equivalent.
Often this equivalence is defined in terms of group actions. A natural question
is to ask when two objects can be distinguished by polynomial functions that
are invariant under the group action. For finite groups, this is the usual
notion of equivalence, but for continuous groups like the general linear groups
it gives rise to a new notion, called orbit closure intersection. It captures,
among others, the graph isomorphism problem, noncommutative PIT, null cone
problems in invariant theory, equivalence problems for tensor networks, and the
classification of multiparty quantum states. Despite recent algorithmic
progress in celebrated special cases, the computational complexity of general
orbit closure intersection problems is currently quite unclear. In particular,
tensors seem to give rise to the most difficult problems.
In this work we start a systematic study of orbit closure intersection from
the complexity-theoretic viewpoint. To this end, we define a complexity class
TOCI that captures the power of orbit closure intersection problems for general
tensor actions, give an appropriate notion of algebraic reductions that imply
polynomial-time reductions in the usual sense, but are amenable to
invariant-theoretic techniques, identify natural tensor problems that are
complete for TOCI, including the equivalence of 2D tensor networks with
constant physical dimension, and show that the graph isomorphism problem can be
reduced to these complete problems, hence GI$\subseteq$TOCI. As such, our work
establishes the first lower bound on the computational complexity of orbit
closure intersection problems, and it explains the difficulty of finding
unconditional polynomial-time algorithms beyond special cases, as has been
observed in the literature. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2411.04639 |