One of the fundamental results in quantum foundations is the Kochen-Specker (KS) theorem, which states that any theory whose predictions agree with quantum mechanics must be contextual, i.e., a quantum observation cannot be understood as revealing a pre-existing value. The theorem hinges on the existence of a mathematical object called a KS vector system. While many KS vector systems are known, the problem of finding the minimum KS vector system in three dimensions has remained stubbornly open for over 55 years. In this paper, we present a new method based on a combination of a Boolean satisfiability (SAT) solver and a computer algebra system (CAS) to address this problem. Our approach shows that a KS system in three dimensions must contain at least 24 vectors. Our SAT+CAS method is over 35,000 times faster at deriving the previously known lower bound of 22 vectors than the prior CAS-based searches. More importantly, we generate certificates that allow verifying our results without trusting either the SAT solver or the CAS. The increase in efficiency is due to the fact we are able to exploit the powerful combinatorial search-with-learning capabilities of SAT solvers, together with the CAS-based isomorph-free exhaustive method of orderly generation of graphs. To the best of our knowledge, our work is the first application of a SAT+CAS method to a problem in the realm of quantum foundations and the first lower bound in the minimum Kochen-Specker problem with a computer-verifiable proof certificate.
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