Tuesday, April 13, 2004
Favorite Theorems: Primality
Posted by Lance
March Edition
Primality is a problem hanging onto a cliff above P with its grip
continuing to loosen each day. - Paraphrased from a talk given by
Juris Hartmanis in 1986.
It took sixteen more years but the primality problem did fall.
PRIMES is in
P by Manindra Agrawal, Neeraj Kayal and Nitin Saxena.
This paper gave the first provably deterministic polynomial-time
algorithm that
could determine whether n is
a prime given n in binary.
The theoretical importance cannot be overstated. But why do
I consider the paper a complexity result instead of just an
algorithmic result?
Manindra Agrawal had already a strong reputation as a
complexity theorist. The proof involves a derandomization technique
for a probabilistic algorithm for primality. But more importantly
primality had a long history in complexity.
Primality is in co-NP almost by definition. In 1975, Vaughn Pratt
showed that PRIMES is in NP. In 1977, Solovay and Strassen showed that
PRIMES in co-RP and testing primality became the standard example
of a probabilistic algorithm. In 1987, Adleman and Huang building on
work of Goldwasser and Kilian showed that PRIMES is in RP and thus in
ZPP. In 1992, Fellows and Koblitz showed that PRIMES is in
UP∩co-UP. Finally in 2002 came AKS putting PRIMES in P.
A runner-up in this area is the division problem recently
shown to be in logarithmic space and below.
10:28 AM
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