English

Timed Prediction Problem for Sandpile Models

Computational Complexity 2025-06-27 v1 Cellular Automata and Lattice Gases

Abstract

We investigate the computational complexity of the timed prediction problem in two-dimensional sandpile models. This question refines the classical prediction problem, which asks whether a cell q will eventually become unstable after adding a grain at cell p from a given configuration. The prediction problem has been shown to be P-complete in several settings, including for subsets of the Moore neighborhood, but its complexity for the von Neumann neighborhood remains open. In a previous work, we provided a complete characterization of crossover gates (a key to the implementation of non-planar monotone circuits) for these small neighborhoods, leading to P-completeness proofs with only 4 and 5 neighbors among the eight adjancent cells. In this paper, we introduce the timed setting, where the goal is to determine whether cell q becomes unstable exactly at time t. We distinguish several cases: some neighborhoods support complete timed toolkits (including timed crossover gates) and exhibit P-completeness; others admit timed crossovers but suffer from synchronization issues; planar neighborhoods provably do not admit any timed crossover; and finally, for some remaining neighborhoods, we conjecture that no timed crossover is possible.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2506.21084,
  title  = {Timed Prediction Problem for Sandpile Models},
  author = {Pablo Concha-Vega and Kévin Perrot},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2506.21084},
  year   = {2025}
}
R2 v1 2026-07-01T03:34:10.901Z