quantum complexity theory
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Quantum ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 544
Author(s):  
Tony Metger ◽  
Thomas Vidick

Self-testing is a method to characterise an arbitrary quantum system based only on its classical input-output correlations, and plays an important role in device-independent quantum information processing as well as quantum complexity theory. Prior works on self-testing require the assumption that the system's state is shared among multiple parties that only perform local measurements and cannot communicate. Here, we replace the setting of multiple non-communicating parties, which is difficult to enforce in practice, by a single computationally bounded party. Specifically, we construct a protocol that allows a classical verifier to robustly certify that a single computationally bounded quantum device must have prepared a Bell pair and performed single-qubit measurements on it, up to a change of basis applied to both the device's state and measurements. This means that under computational assumptions, the verifier is able to certify the presence of entanglement, a property usually closely associated with two separated subsystems, inside a single quantum device. To achieve this, we build on techniques first introduced by Brakerski et al. (2018) and Mahadev (2018) which allow a classical verifier to constrain the actions of a quantum device assuming the device does not break post-quantum cryptography.


Author(s):  
Samad Khabbazi Oskouei ◽  
Stefano Mancini ◽  
Mark M. Wilde

In this paper, we prove a quantum union bound that is relevant when performing a sequence of binary-outcome quantum measurements on a quantum state. The quantum union bound proved here involves a tunable parameter that can be optimized, and this tunable parameter plays a similar role to a parameter involved in the Hayashi–Nagaoka inequality (Hayashi & Nagaoka 2003 IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory 49 , 1753–1768. ( doi:10.1109/TIT.2003.813556 )), used often in quantum information theory when analysing the error probability of a square-root measurement. An advantage of the proof delivered here is that it is elementary, relying only on basic properties of projectors, Pythagoras' theorem, and the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality. As a non-trivial application of our quantum union bound, we prove that a sequential decoding strategy for classical communication over a quantum channel achieves a lower bound on the channel's second-order coding rate. This demonstrates the advantage of our quantum union bound in the non-asymptotic regime, in which a communication channel is called a finite number of times. We expect that the bound will find a range of applications in quantum communication theory, quantum algorithms and quantum complexity theory.


2005 ◽  
Vol 03 (01) ◽  
pp. 31-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOZEF GRUSKA

Quantum complexity theory is a powerful tool that provides deep insights into Quantum Information Processing (QIP) and aims to do that also for Quantum Mechanics (QM), in general. This paper is a short review of the main and new motivations, goals, tools, results and challenges of quantum complexity, oriented mainly for pedestrians.


1997 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 1411-1473 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ethan Bernstein ◽  
Umesh Vazirani

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