Time Hierarchy Theorem

Time Hierarchy Theorem

In computational complexity theory, the time hierarchy theorems are important statements about time-bounded computation on Turing machines. Informally, these theorems say that given more time, a Turing machine can solve more problems. For example, there are problems that can be solved with n2 time but not n time.

The time hierarchy theorem for deterministic multi-tape Turing machines was first proven by Richard Stearns and Juris Hartmanis in 1965. It was improved a year later when F. C. Hennie and Richard Stearns improved the efficiency of the Universal Turing machine. As a consequence, for every deterministic time-bounded complexity class, there is a strictly larger time-bounded complexity class, and so the time-bounded hierarchy of complexity classes does not completely collapse. More precisely, the time hierarchy theorem for deterministic Turing machines states that for all time-constructible functions ,

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The time hierarchy theorem for nondeterministic Turing machines was originally proven by Stephen Cook in 1972. It was improved to its current form via a complex proof by Joel Seiferas, Michael Fischer, and Albert Meyer in 1978. Finally in 1983, Stanislav Žák achieved the same result with the simple proof taught today. The time hierarchy theorem for nondeterministic Turing machines states that if g(n) is a time-constructible function, and f(n+1) = o(g(n)), then

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The analogous theorems for space are the space hierarchy theorems. A similar theorem is not known for time-bounded probabilistic complexity classes, unless the class also has advice.

Read more about Time Hierarchy Theorem:  Background, Proof Overview, Non-deterministic Time Hierarchy Theorem, Consequences

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