Geometric complexity theory and matrix powering
Fulvio Gesmundo, Christian Ikenmeyer, Greta Panova

TL;DR
This paper reformulates geometric complexity theory using matrix powers instead of determinants, simplifying the approach and proving the first no-go result that rules out superlinear lower bounds in this model.
Contribution
It introduces a homogeneous reformulation of geometric complexity theory replacing determinants with matrix traces, enabling new lower bound analysis.
Findings
No orbit occurrence obstructions for superlinear lower bounds
Homogeneous formulation simplifies the representation theoretic questions
First no-go result ruling out superlinear bounds in this model
Abstract
Valiant's famous determinant versus permanent problem is the flagship problem in algebraic complexity theory. Mulmuley and Sohoni (Siam J Comput 2001, 2008) introduced geometric complexity theory, an approach to study this and related problems via algebraic geometry and representation theory. Their approach works by multiplying the permanent polynomial with a high power of a linear form (a process called padding) and then comparing the orbit closures of the determinant and the padded permanent. This padding was recently used heavily to show no-go results for the method of shifted partial derivatives (Efremenko, Landsberg, Schenck, Weyman, 2016) and for geometric complexity theory (Ikenmeyer Panova, FOCS 2016 and B\"urgisser, Ikenmeyer Panova, FOCS 2016). Following a classical homogenization result of Nisan (STOC 1991) we replace the determinant in geometric complexity theory with the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Combinatorial Mathematics · Polynomial and algebraic computation · Graph theory and applications
