3 research outputs found
Indistinguishability Obfuscation of Null Quantum Circuits and Applications
We study the notion of indistinguishability obfuscation for null quantum circuits (quantum null-iO). We present a construction assuming:
- The quantum hardness of learning with errors (LWE).
- Post-quantum indistinguishability obfuscation for classical circuits.
- A notion of "dual-mode" classical verification of quantum computation (CVQC). We give evidence that our notion of dual-mode CVQC exists by proposing a scheme that is secure assuming LWE in the quantum random oracle model (QROM).
Then we show how quantum null-iO enables a series of new cryptographic primitives that, prior to our work, were unknown to exist even making heuristic assumptions. Among others, we obtain the first witness encryption scheme for QMA, the first publicly verifiable non-interactive zero-knowledge (NIZK) scheme for QMA, and the first attribute-based encryption (ABE) scheme for BQP
Computing with Coloured Tangles
We suggest a diagrammatic model of computation based on an axiom of
distributivity. A diagram of a decorated coloured tangle, similar to those that
appear in low dimensional topology, plays the role of a circuit diagram.
Equivalent diagrams represent bisimilar computations. We prove that our model
of computation is Turing complete, and that with bounded resources it can
moreover decide any language in complexity class IP, sometimes with better
performance parameters than corresponding classical protocols.Comment: 36 pages,; Introduction entirely rewritten, Section 4.3 adde