NEXPTIME

In computational complexity theory, the complexity class NEXPTIME (sometimes called NEXP) is the set of decision problems that can be solved by a non-deterministic Turing machine using time O(2p(n)) for some polynomial p(n), and unlimited space.

In terms of NTIME,

<math>\mbox{NEXPTIME} = \bigcup_{k\in\mathbb{N}} \mbox{NTIME}(2^{n^k})<math>

An important set of NEXPTIME-complete problems relates to succinct circuits. Succinct circuits are simple machines used to describe graphs in exponentially less space. They accept two vertex numbers as input and output whether there is an edge between them. If solving a problem on a graph in a natural representation, such as an adjacency matrix, is NP-complete, then solving the same problem on a succinct circuit representation is NEXPTIME-complete, because the input is exponentially smaller.1 As one simple example, finding a Hamiltonian path for a graph thus encoded is NEXPTIME-complete.

Alternative characterizations

NEXPTIME often arises in the context of interactive proof systems, where there are two major characterizations of it. The first is the MIP proof system, where we have two all-powerful provers which communicate with a randomized polynomial-time verifier (but not with each other). If the string is in the language, they must be able to convince the verifier of this with high probability. If the string is not in the language, they must not be able to collaboratively trick the verifier into accepting the string except with low probability. The fact that MIP proof systems can solve every problem in NEXPTIME is quite impressive when we consider that when only prover is present, we can only recognize all of PSPACE; the verifier's ability to "cross-examine" the two provers gives it great power. See interactive proof system#MIP for more details.

Another interactive proof system characterizing NEXPTIME is a certain class of probabilistically checkable proofs. Recall that NP can be seen as the class of problems where an all-powerful prover gives a purported proof that a string is in the language, and a deterministic polynomial-time machine verifies that it is a valid proof. We make two changes to this setup:

  • Add randomness, the ability to flip coins, to the verifier machine.
  • Instead of simply giving the purported proof to the verifier on a tape, give it random access to the proof. The verifier can specify an index into the proof string and receive the corresponding bit. Since the verifier can write an index of polynomial length, it can potentially index into an exponentially long proof string.

These two extensions together greatly extend the proof system's power, enabling it to recognize all languages in NEXPTIME. The class is called PCP(poly, poly). See probabilistically checkable proofs for more details.

References

C. Papadimitriou. Computational Complexity. Addison-Wesley, 1994. ISBN 0201530821.
  • Complexity Zoo: NEXP (http://www.complexityzoo.com/#nexp), co-NEXP (http://www.complexityzoo.com/#conexp)

Footnotes

1. Papadimitriou, section 20.1, pg.492.es:NEXPTIME
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