In computational complexity theory, a sparse language is a formal language (a set of strings) such that the complexity function, counting the number of strings of length n in the language, is bounded by a polynomial function of n. They are used primarily in the study of the relationship of the complexity class NP with other classes. The complexity class of all sparse languages is called SPARSE.

Sparse languages are called sparse because there are a total of 2n strings of length n, and if a language only contains polynomially many of these, then the proportion of strings of length n that it contains rapidly goes to zero as n grows. All unary languages are sparse. An example of a nontrivial sparse language is the set of binary strings containing exactly k 1 bits for some fixed k; for each n, there are only strings in the language, which is bounded by nk.

Relationships to other complexity classes

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  • SPARSE contains TALLY, the class of unary languages, since these have at most one string of any one length.
  • Although not all languages in P/poly are sparse, there is a polynomial-time Turing reduction from any language in P/poly to a sparse language.[1]
  • Fortune showed in 1979 that if any sparse language is co-NP-complete, then P = NP.[2] Mahaney used this to show in 1982 that if any sparse language is NP-complete, then P = NP (this is Mahaney's theorem).[3] A simpler proof of this based on left-sets was given by Ogihara and Watanabe in 1991.[4] Mahaney's argument does not actually require the sparse language to be in NP (because the existence of an NP-hard sparse set implies the existence of an NP-complete sparse set), so there is a sparse NP-hard set if and only if P = NP.[5]
  • Further, ENE if and only if there exist sparse languages in NP that are not in P.[6]
  • There is a Turing reduction (as opposed to the Karp reduction from Mahaney's theorem) from an NP-complete language to a sparse language if and only if  .
  • In 1999, Jin-Yi Cai and D. Sivakumar, building on work by Ogihara, showed that if there exists a sparse P-complete problem, then L = P.[7]

References

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  1. ^ Jin-Yi Cai. Lecture 11: P=poly, Sparse Sets, and Mahaney's Theorem. CS 810: Introduction to Complexity Theory. The University of Wisconsin–Madison. September 18, 2003 (PDF)
  2. ^ S. Fortune. A note on sparse complete sets. SIAM Journal on Computing, volume 8, issue 3, pp.431–433. 1979.
  3. ^ S. R. Mahaney. Sparse complete sets for NP: Solution of a conjecture by Berman and Hartmanis. Journal of Computer and System Sciences 25:130–143. 1982.
  4. ^ M. Ogiwara and O. Watanabe. On polynomial time bounded truth-table reducibility of NP sets to sparse sets. SIAM Journal on Computing volume 20, pp.471–483. 1991.
  5. ^ Balcázar, José Luis; Díaz, Josep; Gabarró, Joaquim (1990). Structural Complexity II. Springer. pp. 130–131. ISBN 3-540-52079-1.
  6. ^ Juris Hartmanis, Neil Immerman, Vivian Sewelson. Sparse Sets in NP-P: EXPTIME versus NEXPTIME. Information and Control, volume 65, issue 2/3, pp.158–181. 1985. At ACM Digital Library
  7. ^ Jin-Yi Cai and D. Sivakumar. Sparse hard sets for P: resolution of a conjecture of Hartmanis. Journal of Computer and System Sciences, volume 58, issue 2, pp.280–296. 1999. ISSN 0022-0000. At Citeseer
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