Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
427315 Information and Computation 2007 19 Pages PDF
Abstract

A number d is magic for n, if there is no regular language for which an optimal nondeterministic finite state automaton (nfa) uses exactly n states and, at the same time, the optimal deterministic finite state automaton (dfa) uses exactly d states. We show that, in the case of unary regular languages, the state hierarchy of dfa’s, for the family of languages accepted by n-state nfa’s, is not contiguous. There are some “holes” in the hierarchy, i.e., magic numbers in between values that are not magic. This solves, for automata with a single letter input alphabet, an open problem of existence of magic numbers. Actually, most of the numbers is magic in the unary case. As an additional bonus, we also get a new universal lower bound for the conversion of unary d-state dfa’s into equivalent nfa’s: nondeterminism does not reduce the number of states below log2d, not even in the best case.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computational Theory and Mathematics