Systems of polynomial equations over an algebraically-closed field K can be used to
concisely model many combinatorial problems. In this way, a combinatorial problem is
feasible (e.g., a graph is 3-colorable, hamiltonian, etc.) if and only if a related system
of polynomial equations has a solution over K. In this paper, we investigate an algorithm
aimed at proving combinatorial infeasibility based on the observed low degree of Hilbert's
Nullstellensatz certificates for polynomial systems arising in combinatorics and on
large-scale linear-algebra computations over K. We report on experiments based on the
problem of proving the non-3-colorability of graphs. We successfully solved graph problem
instances having thousands of nodes and tens of thousands of edges.