Abstract

Here we study linear programming applied to the random K-SAT problem, a fundamental problem in computational complexity. The K-SAT problem is to decide whether a Boolean formula with N variables and structured as a conjunction of M clauses, each being a disjunction of K variables or their negations is satisfiable or not. The ensemble of random K-SAT attracted considerable interest from physicists because for a specific ratio αs = M/N it undergoes in the limit of large N a sharp phase transition from a satisfiable to an unsatisfiable phase. In this study we will concentrate on finding for linear programming algorithms “easy-hard” transitions between phases of different typical hardness of the problems on either side. Linear programming is widely applied to solve practical optimization problems, but has been only rarely considered in the physics community. This is a deficit, because those typically studied types of algorithms work in the space of feasible {0, 1}N configurations while linear programming operates outside the space of valid configurations hence gives a very different perspective on the typical-case hardness of a problem. Here, we demonstrate that the technique leads to one simple-to-understand transition for the well known 2-SAT problem. On the other hand we detect multiple transitions in 3-SAT and 4-SAT. We demonstrate that, in contrast to the previous work on vertex cover and therefore somewhat surprisingly, the hardness transitions are not driven by changes of any of various standard percolation or solution space properties of the problem instances. Thus, here a more complex yet undetected property must be related to the easy-hard transition.

Highlights

  • The Satisfiability problem (SAT) [1] is to decide whether some Boolean formula is satisfiable or not, i.e., whether for a given Boolean formula, there is an assignment of the variables such that the formula evaluates to “true”

  • All Boolean formulas can be expressed in conjunctive normal form (CNF) which is a disjunction of clauses, each being a conjunction of variables or negated variables

  • Phase transitions of the complexity of the random satisfiability problem studied with linear programming solutions which are not necessarily feasible, which here means non-integer-valued assignments to the variables, but which establish a lower bound on the objective

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Summary

Introduction

The Satisfiability problem (SAT) [1] is to decide whether some Boolean formula is satisfiable or not, i.e., whether for a given Boolean formula, there is an assignment of the variables such that the formula evaluates to “true”. Phase transitions of the complexity of the random satisfiability problem studied with linear programming solutions which are not necessarily feasible, which here means non-integer-valued assignments to the variables, but which establish a lower bound on the objective.

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