A superpolynomial lower bound for the size of non-deterministic complement of an unambiguous automaton

Abstract

Unambiguous non-deterministic finite automata have intermediate expressive power and succinctness between deterministic and non-deterministic automata. It has been conjectured that every unambiguous non-deterministic one-way finite automaton (1UFA) recognizing some language L can be converted into a 1UFA recognizing the complement of the original language L with polynomial increase in the number of states. We disprove this conjecture by presenting a family of 1UFAs on a single-letter alphabet such that recognizing the complements of the corresponding languages requires superpolynomial increase in the number of states even for generic non-deterministic one-way finite automata. We also note that both the languages and their complements can be recognized by sweeping deterministic automata with a linear increase in the number of states.

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