Combined decision techniques for the existential theory of the reals

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Abstract

Methods for deciding quantifier-free non-linear arithmetical conjectures over ℝ are crucial in the formal verification of many real-world systems and in formalised mathematics. While non-linear (rational function) arithmetic over ℝ is decidable, it is fundamentally infeasible: any general decision method for this problem is worst-case exponential in the dimension (number of variables) of the formula being analysed. This is unfortunate, as many practical applications of real algebraic decision methods require reasoning about high-dimensional conjectures. Despite their inherent infeasibility, a number of different decision methods have been developed, most of which have "sweet spots" - e.g., types of problems for which they perform much better than they do in general. Such "sweet spots" can in many cases be heuristically combined to solve problems that are out of reach of the individual decision methods when used in isolation. RAHD ("Real Algebra in High Dimensions") is a theorem prover that works to combine a collection of real algebraic decision methods in ways that exploit their respective "sweet-spots." We discuss high-level mathematical and design aspects of RAHD and illustrate its use on a number of examples. © 2009 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

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Passmore, G. O., & Jackson, P. B. (2009). Combined decision techniques for the existential theory of the reals. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 5625 LNAI, pp. 122–137). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-02614-0_14

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