1,731 research outputs found
The Quantum PCP Conjecture
The classical PCP theorem is arguably the most important achievement of
classical complexity theory in the past quarter century. In recent years,
researchers in quantum computational complexity have tried to identify
approaches and develop tools that address the question: does a quantum version
of the PCP theorem hold? The story of this study starts with classical
complexity and takes unexpected turns providing fascinating vistas on the
foundations of quantum mechanics, the global nature of entanglement and its
topological properties, quantum error correction, information theory, and much
more; it raises questions that touch upon some of the most fundamental issues
at the heart of our understanding of quantum mechanics. At this point, the jury
is still out as to whether or not such a theorem holds. This survey aims to
provide a snapshot of the status in this ongoing story, tailored to a general
theory-of-CS audience.Comment: 45 pages, 4 figures, an enhanced version of the SIGACT guest column
from Volume 44 Issue 2, June 201
Quantum Bounded Query Complexity
We combine the classical notions and techniques for bounded query classes
with those developed in quantum computing. We give strong evidence that quantum
queries to an oracle in the class NP does indeed reduce the query complexity of
decision problems. Under traditional complexity assumptions, we obtain an
exponential speedup between the quantum and the classical query complexity of
function classes.
For decision problems and function classes we obtain the following results: o
P_||^NP[2k] is included in EQP_||^NP[k] o P_||^NP[2^(k+1)-2] is included in
EQP^NP[k] o FP_||^NP[2^(k+1)-2] is included in FEQP^NP[2k] o FP_||^NP is
included in FEQP^NP[O(log n)] For sets A that are many-one complete for PSPACE
or EXP we show that FP^A is included in FEQP^A[1]. Sets A that are many-one
complete for PP have the property that FP_||^A is included in FEQP^A[1]. In
general we prove that for any set A there is a set X such that FP^A is included
in FEQP^X[1], establishing that no set is superterse in the quantum setting.Comment: 11 pages LaTeX2e, no figures, accepted for CoCo'9
Making Classical Ground State Spin Computing Fault-Tolerant
We examine a model of classical deterministic computing in which the ground
state of the classical system is a spatial history of the computation. This
model is relevant to quantum dot cellular automata as well as to recent
universal adiabatic quantum computing constructions. In its most primitive
form, systems constructed in this model cannot compute in an error free manner
when working at non-zero temperature. However, by exploiting a mapping between
the partition function for this model and probabilistic classical circuits we
are able to show that it is possible to make this model effectively error free.
We achieve this by using techniques in fault-tolerant classical computing and
the result is that the system can compute effectively error free if the
temperature is below a critical temperature. We further link this model to
computational complexity and show that a certain problem concerning finite
temperature classical spin systems is complete for the complexity class
Merlin-Arthur. This provides an interesting connection between the physical
behavior of certain many-body spin systems and computational complexity.Comment: 24 pages, 1 figur
Oracle Complexity Classes and Local Measurements on Physical Hamiltonians
The canonical problem for the class Quantum Merlin-Arthur (QMA) is that of
estimating ground state energies of local Hamiltonians. Perhaps surprisingly,
[Ambainis, CCC 2014] showed that the related, but arguably more natural,
problem of simulating local measurements on ground states of local Hamiltonians
(APX-SIM) is likely harder than QMA. Indeed, [Ambainis, CCC 2014] showed that
APX-SIM is P^QMA[log]-complete, for P^QMA[log] the class of languages decidable
by a P machine making a logarithmic number of adaptive queries to a QMA oracle.
In this work, we show that APX-SIM is P^QMA[log]-complete even when restricted
to more physical Hamiltonians, obtaining as intermediate steps a variety of
related complexity-theoretic results.
We first give a sequence of results which together yield P^QMA[log]-hardness
for APX-SIM on well-motivated Hamiltonians: (1) We show that for NP, StoqMA,
and QMA oracles, a logarithmic number of adaptive queries is equivalent to
polynomially many parallel queries. These equalities simplify the proofs of our
subsequent results. (2) Next, we show that the hardness of APX-SIM is preserved
under Hamiltonian simulations (a la [Cubitt, Montanaro, Piddock, 2017]). As a
byproduct, we obtain a full complexity classification of APX-SIM, showing it is
complete for P, P^||NP, P^||StoqMA, or P^||QMA depending on the Hamiltonians
employed. (3) Leveraging the above, we show that APX-SIM is P^QMA[log]-complete
for any family of Hamiltonians which can efficiently simulate spatially sparse
Hamiltonians, including physically motivated models such as the 2D Heisenberg
model.
Our second focus considers 1D systems: We show that APX-SIM remains
P^QMA[log]-complete even for local Hamiltonians on a 1D line of 8-dimensional
qudits. This uses a number of ideas from above, along with replacing the "query
Hamiltonian" of [Ambainis, CCC 2014] with a new "sifter" construction.Comment: 38 pages, 3 figure
How Powerful is Adiabatic Quantum Computation?
We analyze the computational power and limitations of the recently proposed
'quantum adiabatic evolution algorithm'.Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX2e, requires fullpage, times, amssymb, and amsmath
packages. This article appeared in the proceedings of FOCS'01; original
submission date: April 27, 200
Quantum Hamiltonian Complexity
Constraint satisfaction problems are a central pillar of modern computational
complexity theory. This survey provides an introduction to the rapidly growing
field of Quantum Hamiltonian Complexity, which includes the study of quantum
constraint satisfaction problems. Over the past decade and a half, this field
has witnessed fundamental breakthroughs, ranging from the establishment of a
"Quantum Cook-Levin Theorem" to deep insights into the structure of 1D
low-temperature quantum systems via so-called area laws. Our aim here is to
provide a computer science-oriented introduction to the subject in order to
help bridge the language barrier between computer scientists and physicists in
the field. As such, we include the following in this survey: (1) The
motivations and history of the field, (2) a glossary of condensed matter
physics terms explained in computer-science friendly language, (3) overviews of
central ideas from condensed matter physics, such as indistinguishable
particles, mean field theory, tensor networks, and area laws, and (4) brief
expositions of selected computer science-based results in the area. For
example, as part of the latter, we provide a novel information theoretic
presentation of Bravyi's polynomial time algorithm for Quantum 2-SAT.Comment: v4: published version, 127 pages, introduction expanded to include
brief introduction to quantum information, brief list of some recent
developments added, minor changes throughou
- …