Polynomial Time Corresponds to Solutions of Polynomial Ordinary Differential Equations of Polynomial Length
Author(s) -
Olivier Bournez,
Daniel S. Graça,
Amaury Pouly
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of the acm
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.672
H-Index - 134
eISSN - 1557-735X
pISSN - 0004-5411
DOI - 10.1145/3127496
Subject(s) - turing machine , mathematics , computability , computable function , polynomial , computable number , complexity class , ordinary differential equation , computable analysis , computation , model of computation , time complexity , differential (mechanical device) , discrete mathematics , algebra over a field , differential equation , pure mathematics , algorithm , mathematical analysis , aerospace engineering , engineering
The outcomes of this article are twofold. Implicit complexity. We provide an implicit characterization of polynomial time computation in terms of ordinary differential equations: we characterize the class P of languages computable in polynomial time in terms of differential equations with polynomial right-hand side. This result gives a purely continuous elegant and simple characterization of P. We believe it is the first time complexity classes are characterized using only ordinary differential equations. Our characterization extends to functions computable in polynomial time over the reals in the sense of Computable Analysis. Our results may provide a new perspective on classical complexity, by giving a way to define complexity classes, like P, in a very simple way, without any reference to a notion of (discrete) machine. This may also provide ways to state classical questions about computational complexity via ordinary differential equations. Continuous-Time Models of Computation. Our results can also be interpreted in terms of analog computers or analog models of computation: As a side effect, we get that the 1941 General Purpose Analog Computer (GPAC) of Claude Shannon is provably equivalent to Turing machines both in terms of computability and complexity, a fact that has never been established before. This result provides arguments in favour of a generalised form of the Church-Turing Hypothesis, which states that any physically realistic (macroscopic) computer is equivalent to Turing machines both in terms of computability and complexity.
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