Alexander Golovnev, Zeyu Guo, Pooya Hatami, Satyajeet Nagargoje, Chao Yan
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Hilbert Functions and Low-Degree Randomness Extractors
For $S\subseteq \mathbb{F}^n$, consider the linear space of restrictions of
degree-$d$ polynomials to $S$. The Hilbert function of $S$, denoted
$\mathrm{h}_S(d,\mathbb{F})$, is the dimension of this space. We obtain a tight
lower bound on the smallest value of the Hilbert function of subsets $S$ of
arbitrary finite grids in $\mathbb{F}^n$ with a fixed size $|S|$. We achieve
this by proving that this value coincides with a combinatorial quantity, namely
the smallest number of low Hamming weight points in a down-closed set of size
$|S|$. Understanding the smallest values of Hilbert functions is closely related to
the study of degree-$d$ closure of sets, a notion introduced by Nie and Wang
(Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A, 2015). We use bounds on the Hilbert
function to obtain a tight bound on the size of degree-$d$ closures of subsets
of $\mathbb{F}_q^n$, which answers a question posed by Doron, Ta-Shma, and Tell
(Computational Complexity, 2022). We use the bounds on the Hilbert function and degree-$d$ closure of sets to
prove that a random low-degree polynomial is an extractor for samplable
randomness sources. Most notably, we prove the existence of low-degree
extractors and dispersers for sources generated by constant-degree polynomials
and polynomial-size circuits. Until recently, even the existence of arbitrary
deterministic extractors for such sources was not known.