Linear Programming Hierarchies Collapse under Symmetry
Abstract
The presence of symmetries is one of the central structural features that make some integer programs challenging for state-of-the-art solvers. In this work, we study the efficacy of Linear Programming (LP) hierarchies in the presence of symmetries. Our main theorem unveils a connection between the algebraic structure of these relaxations and the geometry of the initial integer-empty polytope: We show that under (k+1)-transitive symmetries--a measure of the underlying symmetry in the problem--the corresponding relaxation at level k of the hierarchy is non-empty if and only if the initial polytope intersects all (n-k)-dimensional faces of the hypercube. In particular, the hierarchies of Sherali-Adams, Lov\'asz-Schrijver, and the Lift-and-Project closure are equally effective at detecting integer emptiness. Our result provides a unifying, group-theoretic characterization of the poor performance of LP-based hierarchies, and offers a simple procedure for proving lower bounds on the integrality gaps of symmetric polytopes under these hierarchies.
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