Let K be a finite field of characteristic p. A polynomial f with coefficients in K is said to be exceptional if it induces a permutation on infinitely many finite extensions of K. Let t be a transcendental, and K be an algebraic closure of K. The exceptional polynomials known to date are constructed
Affine projections of symmetric polynomials
β Scribed by Amir Shpilka
- Book ID
- 104147636
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 223 KB
- Volume
- 65
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-0000
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In this paper, we introduce a new model for computing polynomials-a depth-2 circuit with a symmetric gate at the top and plus gates at the bottom, i.e. the circuit computes a symmetric function in linear functions-S d m Γ°c 1 ; c 2 ; y; c m Γ Γ°S d m is the dth elementary symmetric polynomial in m variables, and the c i 's are linear functions). We refer to this model as the symmetric model. This new model is related to standard models of arithmetic circuits, especially to depth-3 circuits. In particular, we show that in order to improve the results of Shpilka and Wigderson (in: CCC, Vol. 14, 1999, pp. 87-96), i.e. to prove super-quadratic lower bounds for depth-3 circuits, one must first prove a super-linear lower bound for the symmetric model.
We prove two non-trivial linear lower bounds for our model. The first lower bound is for computing the determinant, and the second is for computing the sum of two monomials. The main technical contribution relates the maximal dimension of linear subspaces on which S d m vanishes to lower bounds in the symmetric model. In particular, we show that an answer of the following problem (which is very natural, and of independent interest) will imply lower bounds on symmetric circuits for many polynomials:
What is the maximal dimension of a linear subspace of C m ; on which S d m vanishes? We give two partial solutions to the problem above, each enables us to prove a different lower bound. Using our techniques we also prove quadratic lower bounds for depth-3 circuits computing the elementary symmetric polynomials of degree an (where 0oao1 is a constant), thus extending the result of Shpilka and Wigderson (in: CCC, Vol. 14, 1999, pp. 87-96). These are the best lower bounds known for depth-3 circuits over fields of characteristic zero.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES