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Questions tagged [computability-theory]

computable sets and functions, Turing degrees, c.e. degrees, models of computability, primitive recursion, oracle computation, models of computability, decision problems, undecidability, Turing jump, halting problem, notions of computable randomness, computable model theory, computable equivalence relation theory, arithmetic and hyperarithmetic hierarchy, infinitary computability, $\alpha$-recursion, complexity theory.

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11 votes
0 answers
233 views
+50

Is there a decidable theory of arithmetic with a non-collapsing quantifier hierarchy?

This question is very close to this old MSE question of mine, which is still unanswered. Is there an (ideally reasonably-natural!) expansion of the structure $(\mathbb{N};+)$ in a finite language ...
0 votes
1 answer
194 views

How slow can an uncomputable function from $\mathbb{N}$ to $\mathbb{N}$ grow? [closed]

I found this question here on MO: What about the fastest-growing non-computable function ? and at first I thought I misread it. Given that all uncomputable functions seem to grow mind-bogglingly fast, ...
5 votes
1 answer
469 views

Is the set of generalized Fermat triples computable?

Is $\;\big\{(a,b,c)\in\mathbb{N}^3: \big(\exists m,n,\ell \in (\mathbb{N}\setminus\{0,1,2\})\big): a^m + b^n= c^\ell\big\}\;$ computable?
-1 votes
0 answers
94 views

Relation between properties of functions/sets and Grzegorczyk's hierarchy

I know for example that the first level of the Grzegorczyk hierarchy contains the functions which enumerate the c.e sets and that it has an interesting relation to the provably total functions in ...
1 vote
1 answer
67 views

Recursive formula for divided differences

In general, a function $f(\cdot)$ defined at points $x_1,x_2,\dots, x_k$, the $(k − 1)$th-order divided difference is defined by the recurrence relation: $$ f[x_1,x_2,\dots...x_k]=\frac{f[x_2,\dots......
9 votes
2 answers
3k views

Is Turing degree actually useful in real life? [closed]

In theoretical computer science, we classify problems according to their Turing degree. Is there any practical application of this? Edit: Given that we cannot explicitly and mechanically understand ...
5 votes
0 answers
158 views

If $\omega_1$ is not inaccessible in $L$, how hard can it be to find a non-measurable $\Sigma^1_3$ set of reals?

In his wonderfully titled paper Can you take Solovay's inaccessible away? Shelah showed that if every $\mathbf{\Sigma}^1_3$ set of reals is Lebesgue measurable, then $\omega_1$ is an inaccessible ...
4 votes
0 answers
188 views

An analogue to Robinson's theorem for Kalmar-elementary functions

Julia Robinson proved that the family of all unary computable total functions is the smallest class containing $S$, $\mathrm{Exc}$, and closed under composition, addition and inversion of surjective ...
2 votes
1 answer
161 views

Are Cohen Generics Minimal Covers?

Are Cohen generics (in $2^\omega$) minimal covers? I'm ultimately interested in this question for some more effective notion of forcing but I realized I wasn't sure how to show this even assuming full ...
5 votes
1 answer
202 views

Turing degrees of lim infs of computable functions

The limit lemma gives a natural characterisation of functions $f : \mathbb{N} \to 2$ with Turing degree below $0'$: they are precisely those that can be written as $f(n) = \lim_k f_k(n)$ where $f_k : \...
18 votes
3 answers
1k views

Computable nonstandard models for weak systems of arithmetic

By Tennenbaum's theorem, PA itself does not have any computable nonstandard models. The integer polynomials which are 0 or have a positive leading coefficient form a computable nonstandard model of ...
1 vote
1 answer
149 views

Resource request (probability theory, computability theory, algebra)

I'm a first year graduate student trying to explore specific topics I might be interested in researching. Currently, I enjoy algebra, probability theory, and the computability theory side of logic, ...
5 votes
0 answers
137 views

Cone avoidance and $\Pi^0_1$-classes

Suppose $X \subseteq 2^{\omega}$ is nonempty and $\Pi^0_1$ relative to $a$. Assume $c_0 \nleq_T b_0 \oplus a$ and $c_1 \nleq_T b_1 \oplus a$. Must there exist some $y \in X$ such that $c_i \nleq_T ...
3 votes
1 answer
144 views

Descriptive set theoretic complexity of computable maps with respect to the Turing jump of the input

For natural numbers $e$, $n$ and elements of Cantor space $X$ let $\{e\}^X(n)$ be the result of running the $e$th Turing machine with oracle $X$ on input $n$. Let $X'$ be the Turing jump of X. Suppose ...
3 votes
1 answer
170 views

Reverse mathematics on lightface $\Pi^1_1$-uniformization for unary relation

It is known that the following form of $\Pi^1_1$-uniformization is equivalent to $\Pi^1_1$-Comprehension over $\mathsf{ATR}_0$ (cf. VI.2.6 of Simpson's book) : (Kondo's uniformization theorem) For ...
4 votes
2 answers
489 views

Mapping between Notations

$\DeclareMathOperator{\address}{address}$ As in my other question, it is assumed that the (total) function describing a given notation is denoted as $\address:p \rightarrow \Bbb{N}$ and assumed to be ...
1 vote
0 answers
108 views

Name For Effective Cantor-Bendixsonish Derivitive

When dealing with a tree (substring closed subset of $\omega^{< \omega})$ a useful operation will frequently be to remove any nodes with finite ordinal rank (i.e., all nodes whose extensions on the ...
6 votes
2 answers
276 views

Extending polynomial hierarchy above $\omega$

The arithmetic hierarchy is naturally extended to all ordinals via ordinal notations creating a hierarchy for all hyperarithmetic sets. The polynomial time hierarchy is defined analogously to the ...
6 votes
1 answer
228 views

Can we computably escape infinitely many functions (allowing partiality)?

Let $(p_i)_{i\in\omega}$ be a uniformly computable sequence of partial functions (i.e. the partial function $q(i,x)=p_i(x)$ is computable) such that infinitely many $p_i$s are total. Must there be a ...
2 votes
0 answers
102 views

Direct construction of an arithmetically high degree below $0^{(\omega)}$

The existence of a high arithmetic degree (meaning the degrees induced by the notion of relative arithmetic definability) below $0^\omega$ can be established by using Harrington/Simpson's ...
10 votes
0 answers
423 views

Function related to length of group presentations: is it computable?

(This question comes from a friend who works in sofic group theory.) Consider the function $f: \mathbb{N} \to \mathbb{N}$, defined, for any $n \in \mathbb{N}$, by putting $f(n)$ to be the largest ...
1 vote
1 answer
87 views

A variant of Seetapun's theorem

Let $X \in 2^{\omega} \setminus \Delta^1_1$ (i.e., $X$ is not hyperarithmetical) and $A \subseteq \omega$. Must there exist $B \in [A]^{\omega} \cup [\omega \setminus A]^{\omega}$ such that no ...
6 votes
0 answers
263 views

Decidably clarifying ordinals

For a computable$^*$ ordinal $\alpha$ (viewed as an $\{<\}$-structure), say that a first-order sentence $\sigma$ in a relational language $\Sigma\supseteq \{<\}$ decidably clarifies $\alpha$ iff ...
3 votes
0 answers
152 views

What is known about the word problem on free algebraic models?

Consider the fragment of first-order logic with equality and universal quantification as the only logical symbols; we call this logic the logic of universal algebra. I am interested in languages $\...
1 vote
0 answers
40 views

Can a positive elementary inductive definition refer to its own stage comparison relation?

This is a cross-post of a question from cstheory.SE Moschovakis' stage comparison theorem says that the stage comparison relation associated with any positive elementary induction is itself definable ...
4 votes
2 answers
134 views

Properties of all relatively computable branches

I'm probably just missing something obvious but suppose that $T \subset 2^{< \omega}$ is a perfect tree with no terminal nodes (what about just $[T]$ non-empty?). If $Y \leq_{T} X$ for all $X \...
3 votes
0 answers
96 views

Can the differential field of d.c.e. reals be nicely construed as a field of functions?

This question is basically a special case of this older question of mine, which is still unanswered. Let $\mathcal{D}$ be the field of d.c.e. reals; these turn out to be exactly the reals $\alpha$ for ...
21 votes
0 answers
919 views

"Compactness for computability" - does it ever happen?

Throughout, "computable structure" means "first-order structure in a computable language with domain $\omega$ whose atomic diagram is computable." Say that a computable structure $...
7 votes
1 answer
716 views

What is the flaw in Cooper's argument?

Lately I have been studying in the subject of degree theory, specifically definability results related to $\mathcal{D}$. A famous conjecture in the field due to Slaman and Woodin is that the only ...
3 votes
0 answers
146 views

Lower Bound of Solutions to P=NP?

Do we at least know that simulating polynomial time non-deterministic Turing machines requires more than a linear slowdown? That is, do we know there is some non-deterministic Turing machine with ...
4 votes
1 answer
266 views

Are (group theoretic) Markov properties on groups with decidable word problems, decidable?

(Link to SE duplicate: https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/4959071/are-group-theoretic-markov-properties-on-groups-with-decidable-word-problems) The Adian-Rabin theorem says that if a property of ...
2 votes
0 answers
78 views

Is this variant of post correspondence problem undecidable?

The post correspondence problem, as defined by wikipedia, is undecidable. The problem is defined as follows. Let $A$ be an alphabet with at least two symbols. The input of the problem consists of ...
-2 votes
1 answer
181 views

What is the computational complexity to verify a P solution with a deterministic Turing machine? [closed]

As we know, NP (nondeterministic polynomial time) is a complexity class used to classify decision problems. NP is the set of decision problems for which the problem instances, where the answer is &...
5 votes
1 answer
243 views

Undecidability of the existential theory

Do you know if I can find the proof that the existential theory of $\mathbb{Z}$ with the structure of addition , divisibility and the relation $(\exists s \in \mathbb{Z})m=np^s$ is undecidable, ...
6 votes
0 answers
297 views

What are these non-classical versions of ZFC defined by realizability?

See Kleene realizability in Peano arithmetic for a similar question, but about PA instead of ZFC. (In particular, an answer as specific as Emil Jeřábek's answer would be great!) In the context of ...
6 votes
1 answer
197 views

Is there a 1-generic degree g such that Th(D(< g)) is more complicated than true arithmetic?

I am currently reading an article titled "Embedding and Coding Below a 1-Generic Degree" by Greenberg and Montalbán(link to a free source:https://pi.math.cornell.edu/~erlkonig/Papers/...
12 votes
5 answers
3k views

Difference between constructive Dedekind and Cauchy reals in computation

If the Axiom of Countable Choice (ACC) $$ \forall n\in \mathbb{N} . \exists x \in X . \varphi [n, x] \implies \exists f: \mathbb{N} \longrightarrow X . \forall n \in \mathbb{N} . \varphi [n, f(n)] $$ ...
1 vote
1 answer
246 views

Minimal Turing machines associated to math statements

It is known that some famous Number Theoretic problems are equivalent to halting of specific Turing machines: Goldbach conjecture holds iff a 47 state TM halts Lagarias' formulation of Riemann ...
2 votes
3 answers
445 views

Existence of equivalence checking algorithm

Set D : Set of decision algorithms X∈D if and only if X is a Turing machine algorithm with finite length takes one input i, binary number X(i)=0 or X(i)=1 or X(i) runs forever. Definition: ...
18 votes
2 answers
1k views

Is there a name for sets for which it is easier to test membership than to find members---and vice versa?

This is a question my son Bob asked me. For some sets it is relatively easy to test for membership but a lot more difficult to find members, and for others the reverse is true. Here is an elementary ...
2 votes
0 answers
142 views

Can a path in Kleene's $\mathcal{O}$ enumerate all of the computable reals via uniform diagonalization?

It's a well-known fact that there are computable diagonalization functions on Baire space $\mathbb{B} = \mathbb{N}^\mathbb{N}$ (i.e., functions which take a sequence $(r_i)_{i\in \mathbb{N}}$ of ...
4 votes
1 answer
274 views

Transfinitely iterated limit computability

Call a real $x$ limit computable iff there is a Turing machine $T$ such that, for any $i\in\omega$, there is $t(i)\in\omega$ such that the $i$th entry on the tape is not changed after time $t(i)$ and ...
10 votes
2 answers
1k views

Decidability of periodic tilings of the plane

I'm interested in tilings of the plane by squares, with labels on the edges. It's well known that (1) the question "can one tile the plane with the following finite set of tiles?" is undecidable, and (...
4 votes
0 answers
149 views

Computable subsets of non-standard models of arithmetic

By Tennenbaum's theorem, there exists no computable non-standard model of $\mathsf{PA}$. That is, for any nonstandard model $M$, we cannot define an encoding of the integers $x\in M$ such that $+_M$, $...
17 votes
7 answers
2k views

Finding the largest integer describable with a string of symbols of predefined length

(This question is motivated by the reading of the article Large numbers and unprovable theorems by Joel Spencer, which can be found at http://mathdl.maa.org/images/upload_library/22/Ford/Spencer669-...
33 votes
15 answers
7k views

What's a magical theorem in logic?

Some theorems are magical: their hypotheses are easy to meet, and when invoked (as lemmas) in the midst of an otherwise routine proof, they deliver the desired conclusion more or less straightaway&...
2 votes
0 answers
132 views

A property of < in Primitive recursive arithmetic

In Primitive recursive arithmetic (PRA), we can introduce $\lt$ by introducing its representing function $K_{\lt}$, where $K_{\lt}(x,y) =sg(x+1-y)$. Here "sg" and "-" are the ...
7 votes
0 answers
161 views

Is strictness decidable?

Let $\mathcal C$ be an $\infty$-category. We can ask: Q: Is $\mathcal C$ a 1-category? That is, are the hom-spaces of $\mathcal C$ essentially discrete? Roughly, my question is: Proto-Question: Is Q ...
13 votes
2 answers
522 views

Computability-theoretic results relevant to realizability

This may be a very naive question which only reflects my failure at literature search, but: Although realizability (in its original form at least) is grounded in computability, the details of ...
15 votes
2 answers
918 views

Which are the hereditarily computably enumerable sets?

My question is about sets that are computably enumerable with respect to their hereditary membership structure. Specifically, let me define that a hereditarily computably enumerable (h.c.e.) set is ...

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