Title :
On separators, segregators and time versus space
Author :
Santhanam, Rahul
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Chicago Univ., IL, USA
Abstract :
Gives an extension of the result due to Paul, Pippenger, Szemeredi and Trotter (1983) that deterministic linear time (DTIME) is distinct from nondeterministic linear time (NTIME). We show that NTIME[n√log*(n)] ≠ DTIME[n√log*(n)]. We show that if the class of multi-pushdown graphs has {o(n), o[n/log(n)]} segregators, then NTIME[n log(n)] ≠ DTIME[n log(n)]. We also show that at least one of the following facts holds: (1) P ≠ L, and (2) for all polynomially bounded constructible time bounds t, NTIME(t) ≠ DTIME(t). We consider the problem of whether NTIME(t) is distinct from NSPACE(t) for constructible time bounds t. A pebble game on graphs is defined such that the existence of a “good” strategy for the pebble game on multi-pushdown graphs implies a “good” simulation of nondeterministic time-bounded machines by nondeterministic space-bounded machines. It is shown that there exists a “good” strategy for the pebble game on multi-pushdown graphs if the graphs have sublinear separators. Finally, we show that nondeterministic time-bounded Turing machines can be simulated by Σ4 machines with an asymptotically smaller time bound, under the assumption that the class of multi-pushdown graphs has sublinear separators
Keywords :
Turing machines; computational complexity; game theory; graph theory; pushdown automata; Σ4 machines; deterministic linear time; multi-pushdown graphs; nondeterministic linear time; nondeterministic space-bounded machines; nondeterministic time-bounded Turing machines; nondeterministic time-bounded machines; pebble game; polynomially bounded constructible time bounds; segregators; space complexity; sublinear separators; time complexity; Complexity theory; Computational modeling; Computer science; Diffusion tensor imaging; Legged locomotion; Particle separators; Polynomials; Turing machines;
Conference_Titel :
Computational Complexity, 16th Annual IEEE Conference on, 2001.
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1053-1
DOI :
10.1109/CCC.2001.933895