5,386 research outputs found
Quantum Information Complexity and Amortized Communication
We define a new notion of information cost for quantum protocols, and a
corresponding notion of quantum information complexity for bipartite quantum
channels, and then investigate the properties of such quantities. These are the
fully quantum generalizations of the analogous quantities for bipartite
classical functions that have found many applications recently, in particular
for proving communication complexity lower bounds. Our definition is strongly
tied to the quantum state redistribution task.
Previous attempts have been made to define such a quantity for quantum
protocols, with particular applications in mind; our notion differs from these
in many respects. First, it directly provides a lower bound on the quantum
communication cost, independent of the number of rounds of the underlying
protocol. Secondly, we provide an operational interpretation for quantum
information complexity: we show that it is exactly equal to the amortized
quantum communication complexity of a bipartite channel on a given state. This
generalizes a result of Braverman and Rao to quantum protocols, and even
strengthens the classical result in a bounded round scenario. Also, this
provides an analogue of the Schumacher source compression theorem for
interactive quantum protocols, and answers a question raised by Braverman.
We also discuss some potential applications to quantum communication
complexity lower bounds by specializing our definition for classical functions
and inputs. Building on work of Jain, Radhakrishnan and Sen, we provide new
evidence suggesting that the bounded round quantum communication complexity of
the disjointness function is \Omega (n/M + M), for M-message protocols. This
would match the best known upper bound.Comment: v1, 38 pages, 1 figur
Exponential Separation of Quantum Communication and Classical Information
We exhibit a Boolean function for which the quantum communication complexity
is exponentially larger than the classical information complexity. An
exponential separation in the other direction was already known from the work
of Kerenidis et. al. [SICOMP 44, pp. 1550-1572], hence our work implies that
these two complexity measures are incomparable. As classical information
complexity is an upper bound on quantum information complexity, which in turn
is equal to amortized quantum communication complexity, our work implies that a
tight direct sum result for distributional quantum communication complexity
cannot hold. The function we use to present such a separation is the Symmetric
k-ary Pointer Jumping function introduced by Rao and Sinha [ECCC TR15-057],
whose classical communication complexity is exponentially larger than its
classical information complexity. In this paper, we show that the quantum
communication complexity of this function is polynomially equivalent to its
classical communication complexity. The high-level idea behind our proof is
arguably the simplest so far for such an exponential separation between
information and communication, driven by a sequence of round-elimination
arguments, allowing us to simplify further the approach of Rao and Sinha.
As another application of the techniques that we develop, we give a simple
proof for an optimal trade-off between Alice's and Bob's communication while
computing the related Greater-Than function on n bits: say Bob communicates at
most b bits, then Alice must send n/exp(O(b)) bits to Bob. This holds even when
allowing pre-shared entanglement. We also present a classical protocol
achieving this bound.Comment: v1, 36 pages, 3 figure
Communication Complexity Lower Bounds by Polynomials
The quantum version of communication complexity allows the two communicating
parties to exchange qubits and/or to make use of prior entanglement (shared
EPR-pairs). Some lower bound techniques are available for qubit communication
complexity, but except for the inner product function, no bounds are known for
the model with unlimited prior entanglement. We show that the log-rank lower
bound extends to the strongest model (qubit communication + unlimited prior
entanglement). By relating the rank of the communication matrix to properties
of polynomials, we are able to derive some strong bounds for exact protocols.
In particular, we prove both the "log-rank conjecture" and the polynomial
equivalence of quantum and classical communication complexity for various
classes of functions. We also derive some weaker bounds for bounded-error
quantum protocols.Comment: 16 pages LaTeX, no figures. 2nd version: rewritten and some results
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