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In logic, two formulae are equisatisfiable if the first formula is satisfiable whenever the second is and vice versa; in other words, either both formulae are satisfiable or both are not. Two equisatisfiable formulae may have different models, provided they both have some or both have none. As a result, equisatisfiability is different from logical equivalence, as two equivalent formulae always have the same models.

Equisatisfiability is generally used in the context of translating formulae, so that one can define a translation to be correct if the original and resulting formulae are equisatisfiable. Examples of translations involving this concept are Skolemization and some translations into Conjunctive normal form. The Davis-Putnam algorithm removes, at each step, a variable from a formula, generating a formula that is equisatisfiable with the original one.

[edit] Examples

A translation from propositional logic into propositional logic in which every binary disjunction a \vee b is replaced by ((a \vee n) \wedge (\neg n \vee b)), where n is a new variable (one for each replaced disjunction) is a transformation in which satisfiability is preserved: the original and resulting formulae are equisatisfiable. Note that these two formulae are not equivalent: the first formula has the model in which b is true while a and n are false, and this is not a model of the second formula, in which n has to be true in this case.




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