Sparse sum-of-squares certificates on finite abelian groups
Hamza Fawzi, James Saunderson, Pablo A. Parrilo

TL;DR
This paper develops combinatorial conditions for representing nonnegative functions on finite abelian groups as sums of squares, with applications to polynomial optimization and polytope extension complexities.
Contribution
It introduces a new framework using chordal covers of Cayley graphs to characterize sum-of-squares representations on finite abelian groups, proving conjectures and analyzing polytope complexities.
Findings
Any nonnegative quadratic form in n binary variables is a sum of squares of functions of degree at most n/2.
Nonnegative functions of degree d on can be expressed as sums of squares of functions with O(d log(N/d)) nonzero Fourier coefficients.
Constructed explicit polytopes with SDP extension complexity significantly lower than LP extension complexity.
Abstract
Let G be a finite abelian group. This paper is concerned with nonnegative functions on G that are sparse with respect to the Fourier basis. We establish combinatorial conditions on subsets S and T of Fourier basis elements under which nonnegative functions with Fourier support S are sums of squares of functions with Fourier support T. Our combinatorial condition involves constructing a chordal cover of a graph related to G and S (the Cayley graph Cay(,S)) with maximal cliques related to T. Our result relies on two main ingredients: the decomposition of sparse positive semidefinite matrices with a chordal sparsity pattern, as well as a simple but key observation exploiting the structure of the Fourier basis elements of G. We apply our general result to two examples. First, in the case where , by constructing a particular chordal cover of the half-cube…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsSparse and Compressive Sensing Techniques · Advanced Optimization Algorithms Research · graph theory and CDMA systems
