Computational Complexity of Enumerative 3-Manifold Invariants

Abstract

Fix a finite group G. We analyze the computational complexity of the problem of counting homomorphisms π1(X) G, where X is a topological space treated as computational input. We are especially interested in requiring G to be a fixed, finite, nonabelian, simple group. We then consider two cases: when the input X=M is a closed, triangulated 3-manifold, and when X=S3 K is the complement of a knot (presented as a diagram) in S3. We prove complexity theoretic hardness results in both settings. When M is closed, we show that counting homomorphisms π1(M) G (up to automorphisms of G) is \#P-complete via parsimonious Levin reduction---the strictest type of polynomial-time reduction. This remains true even if we require M to be an integer homology 3-sphere. We prove an analogous result in the case that X=S3 K is the complement of a knot. Both proofs proceed by studying the action of the pointed mapping class group MCG*() on the set of homomorphisms \π1() G\ for an appropriate surface . In the case where X=M is closed, we take to be a closed surface with large genus. When X=S3 K is a knot complement, we take to be a disk with many punctures. Our constructions exhibit classical computational universality for a combinatorial topological quantum field theory associated to G. Our "topological classical computing" theorems are analogs of the famous results of Freedman, Larsen and Wang establishing the quantum universality of topological quantum computing with the Jones polynomial at a root of unity. Instead of using quantum circuits, we develop a circuit model for classical reversible computing that is equivariant with respect to a symmetry of the computational alphabet.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…