Abstract

We study the bit-complexity intrinsic to solving the initial-value and (several types of) boundary-value problems for linear evolutionary systems of partial differential equations (PDEs), based on the Computable Analysis approach. Our algorithms are guaranteed to compute classical solutions to such problems approximately up to error 1/2n, so that n corresponds to the number of reliable bits of the output; bit-cost is measured with respect to n. Computational Complexity Theory allows us to prove in a rigorous sense that PDEs with constant coefficients are algorithmically ‘easier’ than general ones. Indeed, solutions to the latter are shown (under natural assumptions) computable using a polynomial number of memory bits, and we prove that the complexity class PSPACE is in general optimal; while the case of constant coefficients can be solved in #P—also essentially optimally so: the Heat Equation ‘requires’ #P1. Our algorithms raise difference schemes to exponential powers, efficiently: we compute any desired entry of such a power in #P, provided that the underlying exponential-sized matrices are circulant of constant bandwidth. Exponentially powering modular two-band circulant matrices is established even feasible in P; and under additional conditions, also the solution to certain linear PDEs becomes polynomial time computable.

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