Abelian logic gates

Alexander E. Holroyd, Lionel Levine, Peter Winkler

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

An abelian processor is an automaton whose output is independent of the order of its inputs. Bond and Levine have proved that a network of abelian processors performs the same computation regardless of processing order (subject only to a halting condition). We prove that any finite abelian processor can be emulated by a network of certain very simple abelian processors, which we call gates. The most fundamental gate is a "toppler", which absorbs input particles until their number exceeds some given threshold, at which point it topples, emitting one particle and returning to its initial state. With the exception of an adder gate, which simply combines two streams of particles, each of our gates has only one input wire. Our results can be reformulated in terms of the functions computed by processors, and one consequence is that any increasing function from N^k to N^l that is the sum of a linear function and a periodic function can be expressed in terms of (possibly nested) sums of floors of quotients by integers.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)388-422
Number of pages35
JournalCombinatorics, Probability and Computing
Volume28
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13 Mar 2019

Keywords

  • cs.DM
  • cs.FL
  • math.CO
  • 68Q10, 68Q45, 68Q85, 90B10

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