Dealing with Degeneracies in Automated Theorem Proving in Geometry

We report, through different examples, the current development in GeoGebra, a widespread Dynamic Geometry software, of geometric automated reasoning tools by means of computational algebraic geometry algorithms. Then we introduce and analyze the case of the degeneracy conditions that so often arise...

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Main Authors: Zoltán Kovács, Tomas Recio, Luis F. Tabera, M. Pilar Vélez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Mathematics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7390/9/16/1964
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spelling doaj-7fe22ffaae654ad0ae0b9972677a7d4c2021-08-26T14:02:25ZengMDPI AGMathematics2227-73902021-08-0191964196410.3390/math9161964Dealing with Degeneracies in Automated Theorem Proving in GeometryZoltán Kovács0Tomas Recio1Luis F. Tabera2M. Pilar Vélez3The Private University College of Education of the Diocese of Linz, Salesianumweg 3, 4020 Linz, AustriaDepartamento de Ingeniería Industrial, Escuela Politécnica Superior, Universidad Antonio de Nebrija, C/Pirineos 55, 28040 Madrid, SpainDepartamento de Matemáticas, Estadística y Computación, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Cantabria, Avenida de los Castros, 39071 Santander, SpainDepartamento de Ingeniería Industrial, Escuela Politécnica Superior, Universidad Antonio de Nebrija, C/Pirineos 55, 28040 Madrid, SpainWe report, through different examples, the current development in GeoGebra, a widespread Dynamic Geometry software, of geometric automated reasoning tools by means of computational algebraic geometry algorithms. Then we introduce and analyze the case of the degeneracy conditions that so often arise in the automated deduction in geometry context, proposing two different ways for dealing with them. One is working with the saturation of the hypotheses ideal with respect to the ring of geometrically independent variables, as a way to globally handle the statement over all non-degenerate components. The second is considering the reformulation of the given hypotheses ideal—considering the independent variables as invertible parameters—and developing and exploiting the specific properties of this zero-dimensional case to analyze individually the truth of the statement over the different non-degenerate components.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7390/9/16/1964automated theorem proving in geometryautomated deduction in geometryautomated reasoning in geometryDynamic GeometryGeoGebracomputational algebraic geometry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zoltán Kovács
Tomas Recio
Luis F. Tabera
M. Pilar Vélez
spellingShingle Zoltán Kovács
Tomas Recio
Luis F. Tabera
M. Pilar Vélez
Dealing with Degeneracies in Automated Theorem Proving in Geometry
Mathematics
automated theorem proving in geometry
automated deduction in geometry
automated reasoning in geometry
Dynamic Geometry
GeoGebra
computational algebraic geometry
author_facet Zoltán Kovács
Tomas Recio
Luis F. Tabera
M. Pilar Vélez
author_sort Zoltán Kovács
title Dealing with Degeneracies in Automated Theorem Proving in Geometry
title_short Dealing with Degeneracies in Automated Theorem Proving in Geometry
title_full Dealing with Degeneracies in Automated Theorem Proving in Geometry
title_fullStr Dealing with Degeneracies in Automated Theorem Proving in Geometry
title_full_unstemmed Dealing with Degeneracies in Automated Theorem Proving in Geometry
title_sort dealing with degeneracies in automated theorem proving in geometry
publisher MDPI AG
series Mathematics
issn 2227-7390
publishDate 2021-08-01
description We report, through different examples, the current development in GeoGebra, a widespread Dynamic Geometry software, of geometric automated reasoning tools by means of computational algebraic geometry algorithms. Then we introduce and analyze the case of the degeneracy conditions that so often arise in the automated deduction in geometry context, proposing two different ways for dealing with them. One is working with the saturation of the hypotheses ideal with respect to the ring of geometrically independent variables, as a way to globally handle the statement over all non-degenerate components. The second is considering the reformulation of the given hypotheses ideal—considering the independent variables as invertible parameters—and developing and exploiting the specific properties of this zero-dimensional case to analyze individually the truth of the statement over the different non-degenerate components.
topic automated theorem proving in geometry
automated deduction in geometry
automated reasoning in geometry
Dynamic Geometry
GeoGebra
computational algebraic geometry
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7390/9/16/1964
work_keys_str_mv AT zoltankovacs dealingwithdegeneraciesinautomatedtheoremprovingingeometry
AT tomasrecio dealingwithdegeneraciesinautomatedtheoremprovingingeometry
AT luisftabera dealingwithdegeneraciesinautomatedtheoremprovingingeometry
AT mpilarvelez dealingwithdegeneraciesinautomatedtheoremprovingingeometry
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