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The Double Exponential Runtime is Tight for 2-Stage Stochastic ILPs

We consider fundamental algorithmic number theoretic problems and their relation to a class of block structured Integer Linear Programs (ILPs) called $2$-stage stochastic. A $2$-stage stochastic ILP is an integer program of the form $\min \{c^T x \mid \mathcal{A} x = b, \ell \leq x \leq u, x \in \mathbb{Z}^{r + ns} \}$ where the constraint matrix $\mathcal{A} \in \mathbb{Z}^{nt \times r +ns}$ consists of $n$ matrices $A_i \in \mathbb{Z}^{t \times r}$ on the vertical line and $n$ matrices $B_i \in \mathbb{Z}^{t \times s}$ on the diagonal line aside. First, we show a stronger hardness result for a number theoretic problem called Quadratic Congruences where the objective is to compute a number $z \leq γ$ satisfying $z^2 \equiv α\bmod β$ for given $α, β, γ\in \mathbb{Z}$. This problem was proven to be NP-hard already in 1978 by Manders and Adleman. However, this hardness only applies for instances where the prime factorization of $β$ admits large multiplicities of each prime number. We circumvent this necessity proving that the problem remains NP-hard, even if each prime number only occurs constantly often. Then, using this new hardness result for the Quadratic Congruences problem, we prove a lower bound of $2^{2^{δ(s+t)}} |I|^{O(1)}$ for some $δ> 0$ for the running time of any algorithm solving $2$-stage stochastic ILPs assuming the Exponential Time Hypothesis (ETH). Here, $|I|$ is the encoding length of the instance. This result even holds if $r$, $||b||_{\infty}$, $||c||_{\infty}, ||\ell||_{\infty}$ and the largest absolute value $Δ$ in the constraint matrix $\mathcal{A}$ are constant. This shows that the state-of-the-art algorithms are nearly tight. Further, it proves the suspicion that these ILPs are indeed harder to solve than the closely related $n$-fold ILPs where the contraint matrix is the transpose of $\mathcal A$.

preprint2021arXivOpen access
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