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CNF Satisfiability in a Subspace and Related Problems

Published 12 Aug 2021 in cs.DS | (2108.05914v1)

Abstract: We introduce the problem of finding a satisfying assignment to a CNF formula that must further belong to a prescribed input subspace. Equivalent formulations of the problem include finding a point outside a union of subspaces (the Union-of-Subspace Avoidance (USA) problem), and finding a common zero of a system of polynomials over $\F_2$ each of which is a product of affine forms. We focus on the case of k-CNF formulas (the k-SUB-SAT problem). Clearly, it is no easier than k-SAT, and might be harder. Indeed, via simple reductions we show NP-hardness for k=2 and W[1]-hardness parameterized by the co-dimension of the subspace. We also prove that the optimization version Max-2-SUB-SAT is NP-hard to approximate better than the trivial 3/4 ratio even on satisfiable instances. On the algorithmic front, we investigate fast exponential algorithms which give non-trivial savings over brute-force algorithms. We give a simple branching algorithm with runtime 1.5r for 2-SUB-SAT, where $r$ is the subspace dimension and an O*(1.4312)n time algorithm where $n$ is the number of variables. For k more than 2, while known algorithms for solving a system of degree $k$ polynomial equations already imply a solution with runtime 2{r(1-1/2k)}, we explore a more combinatorial approach. For instance, based on the notion of critical variables, we give an algorithm with running time ${n\choose {\le t}} 2{n-n/k}$, where $n$ is the number of variables and $t$ is the co-dimension of the subspace. This improves upon the running time of the polynomial equations approach for small co-dimension. Our algorithm also achieves polynomial space in contrast to the algebraic approach that uses exponential space.

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