DocumentCode :
2517381
Title :
The isomorphic conjecture fails relative to a random oracle
Author :
Kurtz, S.A.
Author_Institution :
Chicago Univ., IL
fYear :
1989
fDate :
19-22 Jun 1989
Firstpage :
2
Abstract :
Summary form only given, as follows. L. Berman and H. Hartmanis (1977) conjectured that there is a polynomial-time computable isomorphism between any two languages m-complete (Karp complete) for NP. D. Joseph and P. Young (1985) discovered a structurally defined class of NP-complete sets and conjectured that certain of these sets (the K fk,s) are not isomorphic to the standard NP-complete sets for some one-way functions f. These two conjectures cannot both be correct. The present authors introduce a new family of strong one-way functions, the scrambling functions. If f is a scrambling function, then Kfk is not isomorphic to the standard NP-complete sets, as Joseph and Young conjectured, and the Berman-Hartmanis conjecture fails. In fact, if scrambling functions exist, then the isomorphism conjecture fails for essentially all natural complexity classes above NP, e.g. PSPACE, EXP, NEXP, and RE. As evidence for the existence of scrambling functions, much more powerful one-way functions-the annihilating functions-are shown to exist relative to a random oracle
Keywords :
computational complexity; annihilating functions; computable isomorphism; isomorphic conjecture; natural complexity classes; random oracle; scrambling function; strong one-way functions; Electrostatic precipitators;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Structure in Complexity Theory Conference, 1989. Proceedings., Fourth Annual
Conference_Location :
Eugene, OR
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-1958-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SCT.1989.41808
Filename :
41808
Link To Document :
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