All Questions
6 questions
2
votes
0
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95
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Why cannot we adapt Barvinok type counting techniques to general convex integer programs?
Decision problems in Integer Linear Programming have Lenstra type algorithms (https://www.math.leidenuniv.nl/~lenstrahw/PUBLICATIONS/1983i/art.pdf) have been generalized to convex integer program ...
4
votes
0
answers
104
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Questions in number theory related to $NC$ and $P$-completeness
Given $a,b\in\mathbb N$ find $\operatorname{GCD}(a,b)$.
Given $a,b,c\in\mathbb N$ find $x,y\in\mathbb Z$ such that $ax+by=c$.
Euclidean algorithm solves both.
My question is if either 1 or 2 is in ...
4
votes
1
answer
2k
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Under what conditions does an Integer Programming problem run in polynomial time?
Given $AX\leq B$ where $A\in\Bbb Z^{m\times n}$,$B\in\Bbb Z^m$ finding $X\in\Bbb Z^n$ where $m\geq n$ is the integer programming problem. If $A$ is totally unimodular then the problem is solvable in ...
3
votes
1
answer
198
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Separation of Anti-Hole Inequality
Given an undirected graph $G=(V,E)$ with no loops or multiple edges, a stable set is a set of vertices for which no two vertices are adjacent.
An induced subgraph $H$ of $G$ is called an odd-antihole ...
2
votes
2
answers
202
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Combinatorial optimization problem involving infinite spin system
In material science research, I am developing an algorithm to solve an infinite combinatorial optimization problem which I believe is the most natural problem when the system size goes to infinity.
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4
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0
answers
242
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Domination in Nice Lattices
Let an integer vector be nice when it has only two nonzero components, which sum to zero. So (0, 0, 3, 0, -3) and (-1, 0, 1, 0, 0) are examples of nice vectors in $n=5$ dimensions.
Call a lattice ...