1 / 22

NP – HARD

NP – HARD . JAYASRI JETTI CHINMAYA KRISHNA SURYADEVARA. P and NP. P – The set of all problems solvable in polynomial time by a deterministic Turing Machine (DTM). Example: Sorting and searching. P and NP.

senona
Télécharger la présentation

NP – HARD

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NP – HARD JAYASRI JETTI CHINMAYA KRISHNA SURYADEVARA

  2. P and NP P – The set of all problems solvable in polynomial time by a deterministic Turing Machine (DTM). Example: Sorting and searching.

  3. P and NP • NP- the set of all problems solvable in polynomial time by non deterministic Turing Machine (NDTM) • Example Partition. P is a subset of NP

  4. NP complete • NP – Complete (NP – C): the set of all problems in NP “at least as hard” as every other problem in NP. • To prove a problem x is NP complete • Show that x is in NP • Show that some other NP - C problem reduces to x • If an NP hard problem can be solved in polynomial time, then all NP complete problems can be solved in polynomial time. • NP – H includes all NP - C problems

  5. Deterministic and non deterministic problems • Algorithm is deterministic if for a given input the output generated is same for function. • A mathematical function is deterministic hence the state is known at every step of algorithm.

  6. Algorithm is nondeterministic if there are more than one path the algorithm can take. Due to this one cannot determine the next state of the machine running the algorithm. • To specify such algorithms we introduce three statements • Choice(s) - arbitrary choose one of the elements of the set S • Failure - signals an unsuccessful completion • Success - signals a successful completion

  7. Whenever there is a set of choices that leads to a successful completion than one search set of choices is always made and the algorithm terminates. • A nondeterministic algorithm terminates unsuccessfully iff there exists no set of choices leading to a successful signal

  8. A machine capable of executing a nondeterministic algorithm is called a nondeterministic machine. • While nondeterministic machine do not exist in practice they will provide strong reason to conclude that certain problems cannot be solved by fast deterministic algorithms

  9. Example of nondeterministic algorithm // the problem is to search for an element X// //output j such that A(j) = x; or j = 0 if x is not in A// j -> choice (1:n) If A(j)= x then print (j); success end if Print (‘0’); failure Complexity O(1); Nondeterministic decision algorithms generate a zero or 1 as their output.

  10. Definition of classes NP - hard and NP - complete • P is a set of all decision problems solvable by a deterministic algorithm in polynomial time. • NP is a set of all decision problems solvable by a nondeterministic algorithm in polynomial time. • Since deterministic algorithms are special case of nondeterministic ones, we can conclude that PNP

  11. Reducibility Let L1 and L2 be problems. L1 reduces to L2 (L1  L2) if and only if there is a deterministic polynomial time algorithm to solve L1 that solves L2 in polynomial time If L1  L2 and L2  L3 then L1  L3 Definition: NP-Hard problem: a problem L is NP hard iffsatisfiability reduces to L

  12. Definition : NP-complete Problem : • A problem L is NP-complete if and only if L is NP-hard and L єNP. • There are NP-hard problems that are not NP-complete. Example : • Halting problem is NP-hard decision problem, but it is not NP-complete. Halting Problem : • To determine for an arbitrary deterministic algorithm A and an input I whether algorithm A with input I ever terminates (or enters an infinite loop).

  13. Halting problem is not NP-complete; but NP-hard • Halting problem is un-decidable. - Hence there exists no algorithm to solve this problem. - So, it is not in NP. - So, it is not NP-complete. Halting problem is NP-hard • To show that Halting problem is NP-hard, we show that satisfiability is  halting problem. • For this let us construct an algorithm A whose input is a prepositional formula X. - Suppose X has n variables. - Algorithm A tries out all 2n possible truth assignments and verifies if X is satisfiable.

  14. Halting problem is NP-hard (Contd..) - If it is satisfied then A stops. - If X is not satisfiable, then A enters an infinite loop. - Hence A halts on input iff X is satisfiable. - If we had a polynomial time algorithm for the halting problem, then we could solve the satisfiability problem in polynomial time using A and X as input to the algorithm for the halting problem . - Hence the halting problem is an NP-hard problem which is not in NP. - So it is not NP-complete.

  15. NP-HARD GRAPH AND SCHEDULING PROBLEMS (CONTD..) • Chromatic Number Decision Problem (CNP) • A coloring of a graph G = (V,E) is a function f : V  { 1,2, …, k} i V . • If (U,V) E then f(u)  f(v). • The CNP is to determine if G has a coloring for a given K. • Satisfiability with at most three literals per clause  chromatic number problem.  CNP is NP-hard.

  16. NP-HARD GRAPH AND SCHEDULING PROBLEMS (contd..) • Directed Hamiltonian Cycle (DHC) • Let G = (V,E) be a directed graph and length n = V • The DHC is a cycle that goes through every vertex exactly once and then returns to the starting vertex. • The DHC problem is to determine if G has a directed Hamiltonian Cycle. Theorem : CNF (Conjunctive Normal Form) satisfiability DHC  DHC is NP-hard.

  17. NP-HARD GRAPH AND SCHEDULING PROBLEMS (CONTD..) • Travelling Salesperson Decision Problem (TSP) : • The problem is to determine if a complete directed graph G = (V,E) with edge costs C(u, v) has a tour of cost at most M. Theorem : Directed Hamiltonian Cycle (DHC)  TSP  TSP is NP-hard.

  18. SOME SIMPLIIFIED NP-HARD PROBLEMS • An NP-hard problem L cannot be solved in deterministic polynomial time. • By placing enough restrictions on any NP hard problem, we can arrive at a polynomial solvable problem.

  19. Examples. (i) CNF(conjuctive normal form)- Satisfiability with at most three literals per clause is NP-hard. If each clause is restricted to have at most two literals then CNF-satisfiability is polynomial solvable (ii)Generating optimal code for a parallel assignment statement is NP-hard, - however if the expressions are restricted to be simple variables, then optimal code can be generated in polynomial time.

  20. (iii)Generating optimal code for level one directed a- cyclic graphs is NP-hard but optimal code for trees can be generated in polynomial time. (iv)Determining if a planner graph is three colorable is NP-Hard - To determine if it is two colorable is a polynomial complexity problem.

  21. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CY_klh5uD-E

  22. THANK YOU

More Related