Algorithms, Complexity Theory and Optimisation Series
On the complexity of hazard-free circuits
2nd October 2019, 14:00
Christian Ikenmeyer
University of Liverpool
Abstract
The problem of constructing hazard-free Boolean circuits dates back to the 1940s and is an important problem in circuit design. Our main lower-bound result unconditionally shows the existence of functions whose circuit complexity is polynomially bounded while every hazard-free implementation is provably of exponential size. Previous lower bounds on the hazard-free complexity were only valid for depth 2 circuits. The same proof method yields that every subcubic implementation of Boolean matrix multiplication must have hazards. These results follow from a crucial structural insight: Hazard-free complexity is a natural generalization of monotone complexity to all (not necessarily monotone) Boolean functions. Thus, we can apply known monotone complexity lower bounds to find lower bounds on the hazard-free complexity. We also lift these methods from the monotone setting to prove exponential hazard-free complexity lower bounds for non-monotone functions.
As our main upper-bound result we show how to efficiently convert a Boolean circuit into a bounded-bit hazard-free circuit with only a polynomially large blow-up in the number of gates. Previously, the best known method yielded exponentially large circuits in the worst case, so our algorithm gives an exponential improvement.
As a side result we establish the NP-completeness of several hazard detection problems.
This is joint work with Balagopal Komarath, Christoph Lenzen, Vladimir Lysikov, Andrey Mokhov, and Karteek Sreenivasaiah
Ashton Street, Liverpool, L69 3BX
United Kingdom
Call the department
+44 (0)151 795 4275