Toward a Characterization of Simulation Between Arithmetic Theories
Abstract
We study when a sound arithmetic theory with polynomial-time decidable axioms efficiently proves the bounded consistency statements for a true sentence . Equivalently, we ask when , viewed as a proof system, simulates . The paper's two unconditional contributions constrain possible characterizations. First, for finitely axiomatized sequential , if , then interprets , implying for some polynomial , and hence . Second, if fails to simulate for some true , then for all sufficiently large it also fails for asserting the exact value of the -state Busy Beaver function. Informally, any argument showing that fails to simulate some also yields unprovable witnessing the same obstruction. These results suggest that relative consistency strength is a serious candidate for governing when simulation is possible, while leaving open whether it is the correct criterion. The paper's central conjectural proposal is that the above sufficient condition is also necessary: if , then for every constant , . Under this proposal, hardness follows in canonical cases where is or a Kolmogorov-randomness axiom. The latter yields further conjectural consequences and extensions.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2604.27787,
title = {Toward a Characterization of Simulation Between Arithmetic Theories},
author = {Hunter Monroe},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2604.27787},
year = {2026}
}