December 2012 Fifty years of the spectrum problem: survey and new results
Arnaud Durand, Neil D. Jones, Johann A. Makowsky, Malika More
Bull. Symbolic Logic 18(4): 505-553 (December 2012). DOI: 10.2178/bsl.1804020

Abstract

In 1952, Heinrich Scholz published a question in The Journal of Symbolic Logic asking for a characterization of spectra, i.e., sets of natural numbers that are the cardinalities of finite models of first order sentences. Günter Asser in turn asked whether the complement of a spectrum is always a spectrum. These innocent questions turned out to be seminal for the development of finite model theory and descriptive complexity. In this paper we survey developments over the last 50-odd years pertaining to the spectrum problem. Our presentation follows conceptual developments rather than the chronological order. Originally a number theoretic problem, it has been approached by means of recursion theory, resource bounded complexity theory, classification by complexity of the defining sentences, and finally by means of structural graph theory. Although Scholz' question was answered in various ways, Asser's question remains open.

Citation

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Arnaud Durand. Neil D. Jones. Johann A. Makowsky. Malika More. "Fifty years of the spectrum problem: survey and new results." Bull. Symbolic Logic 18 (4) 505 - 553, December 2012. https://doi.org/10.2178/bsl.1804020

Information

Published: December 2012
First available in Project Euclid: 13 November 2012

zbMATH: 1309.03014
MathSciNet: MR3053068
Digital Object Identifier: 10.2178/bsl.1804020

Rights: Copyright © 2012 Association for Symbolic Logic

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Vol.18 • No. 4 • December 2012
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