Rational-Valued Affine Verifiers in Arthur--Merlin Proof Systems
For complexity theorists, it demonstrates that the power of affine verification is structural rather than dependent on irrational or infinite-precision parameters.
This paper shows that affine finite-state verifiers with rational-valued transition matrices retain the verification advantages of the general real-valued model, enabling weak verification of all Turing-recognizable languages and strong verification for languages in ATIME(2^{O(n)}) and PSPACE.
Affine automata provide a finite-state computational model that preserves the linear-algebraic structure of quantum computation while operating entirely over the reals. Recent work has shown that affine automata can far surpass classical probabilistic finite-state verifiers. However, prior constructions relied on arbitrary real-valued transition matrices, leaving open whether the observed power stems from the affine mechanism itself or from computational resources implicitly encoded in irrational or infinite-precision parameters. This paper studies one-way and two-way automata with deterministic and affine states as verifiers in Arthur--Merlin proof systems under the restriction that every affine transition matrix has rational entries, and shows that the resulting rational model still supports the main verification advantages of affine finite-state verification. At the one-way level, we verify benchmark nonregular languages that are provably hard or impossible for classical two-way probabilistic verifiers. At the two-way level, we achieve weak verification of every Turing-recognizable language, strong bounded-error verification for every language in $\mathbf{ATIME}(2^{O(n)})$, and perfect-completeness strong verification for every language in $\mathbf{PSPACE}$. These results establish that the remarkable verification power of affine finite-state automata is structural.