Some Problems Have No Solutions: 30 Years Later, Papers on the Topic Earn Test of Time Award

The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Computer Society Technical Committee on Mathematical Foundations of Computing (TCMF) has recognized the long-term impact of two papers co-written by Illinois Institute of Technology College of Computing Dean Lance Fortnow 30 years ago.
Fortnow was honored with the Test of Time Award by the TCMF at its 61st annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science for āā and ā.ā
Fortnow was a young assistant professor in the computer science department at the University of ŗ£½ĒĀŅĀ× when he co-wrote āAlgebraic Methods for Interactive Proof Systemsā with Carsten Lund, Howard Karloff, and Noam Nisan in 1990. Lund was Fortnowās Ph.D. student at the time, and now works at AT&T Labs Research. Karloff was a fellow professor, who now works at Goldman Sachs. Nisan, then and now a professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, went to graduate school with Fortnow.
āThe paper gives an āinteractive proofā to show that solutions for some problems donāt exist,ā Fortnow says. āFor example, given a map, a powerful being Hera can convince a mortal Harry that there is no method to color the map with three colors unless two bordering countries get the same color. In this model, Harry can ask the powerful being randomly generated questions to determine a solution does not exist.ā
Fortnow and Lund teamed up with LĆ”szló Babai, a fellow University of ŗ£½ĒĀŅĀ× professor, to write āNon-Deterministic Exponential Time Has Two-Prover Interactive Protocols.ā
āIt examines a different model and shows that there is a very long proof written in a huge book, far bigger than Harry can fully read,ā Fortnow says. āBut, by checking a small number of randomly chosen places, Harry can be convinced that the proof is correct.ā
The Babai-Fortnow-Lund work has some surprising applications to show that we cannot find solutions, even close to optimal, to many optimization problems.
These are the second annual FOCS Test of Time Awards. The 2020 award winners were presented at the FOCS symposium, held virtually, on November 16ā19. The awards recognize the long-term impact of research in forms that include opening up a new area of research, introducing new techniques, or solving a problem of lasting importance.
Photo: College of Computing Dean Lance Fortnow