Title
On the complexity of the multivariate resultant
Abstract
The multivariate resultant is a fundamental tool of computational algebraic geometry. It can in particular be used to decide whether a system of n homogeneous equations in n variables is satisfiable (the resultant is a polynomial in the system's coefficients which vanishes if and only if the system is satisfiable). In this paper, we investigate the complexity of computing the multivariate resultant. First, we study the complexity of testing the multivariate resultant for zero. Our main result is that this problem is NP-hard under deterministic reductions in any characteristic, for systems of low-degree polynomials with coefficients in the ground field (rather than in an extension). In null characteristic, we observe that this problem is in the Arthur-Merlin class AM if the generalized Riemann hypothesis holds true, while the best known upper bound in positive characteristic remains PSPACE. Second, we study the classical algorithms to compute the resultant. They usually rely on the computation of the determinant of an exponential-size matrix, known as Macaulay matrix. We show that this matrix belongs to a class of succinctly representable matrices, for which testing the determinant for zero is proved PSPACE-complete. This means that improving Canny's PSPACE upper bound requires either to look at the fine structure of the Macaulay matrix to find an ad hoc algorithm for computing its determinant, or to use altogether different techniques.
Year
DOI
Venue
2012
10.1016/j.jco.2012.10.001
J. Complexity
Keywords
DocType
Volume
computational algebraic geometry,exponential-size matrix,classical algorithm,n variable,n homogeneous equation,Arthur-Merlin class,null characteristic,succinctly representable matrix,Macaulay matrix,positive characteristic
Journal
29
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
2
Journal of Complexity, 29(2), pp 142-157, 2013
3
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.38
28
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Bruno Grenet1336.56
Pascal Koiran2919113.85
Natacha Portier39611.49