10,766 research outputs found
Universal blind quantum computation
We present a protocol which allows a client to have a server carry out a
quantum computation for her such that the client's inputs, outputs and
computation remain perfectly private, and where she does not require any
quantum computational power or memory. The client only needs to be able to
prepare single qubits randomly chosen from a finite set and send them to the
server, who has the balance of the required quantum computational resources.
Our protocol is interactive: after the initial preparation of quantum states,
the client and server use two-way classical communication which enables the
client to drive the computation, giving single-qubit measurement instructions
to the server, depending on previous measurement outcomes. Our protocol works
for inputs and outputs that are either classical or quantum. We give an
authentication protocol that allows the client to detect an interfering server;
our scheme can also be made fault-tolerant.
We also generalize our result to the setting of a purely classical client who
communicates classically with two non-communicating entangled servers, in order
to perform a blind quantum computation. By incorporating the authentication
protocol, we show that any problem in BQP has an entangled two-prover
interactive proof with a purely classical verifier.
Our protocol is the first universal scheme which detects a cheating server,
as well as the first protocol which does not require any quantum computation
whatsoever on the client's side. The novelty of our approach is in using the
unique features of measurement-based quantum computing which allows us to
clearly distinguish between the quantum and classical aspects of a quantum
computation.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures. This version contains detailed proofs of
authentication and fault tolerance. It also contains protocols for quantum
inputs and outputs and appendices not available in the published versio
Quantum-enhanced Secure Delegated Classical Computing
We present a quantumly-enhanced protocol to achieve unconditionally secure
delegated classical computation where the client and the server have both
limited classical and quantum computing capacity. We prove the same task cannot
be achieved using only classical protocols. This extends the work of Anders and
Browne on the computational power of correlations to a security setting.
Concretely, we present how a client with access to a non-universal classical
gate such as a parity gate could achieve unconditionally secure delegated
universal classical computation by exploiting minimal quantum gadgets. In
particular, unlike the universal blind quantum computing protocols, the
restriction of the task to classical computing removes the need for a full
universal quantum machine on the side of the server and makes these new
protocols readily implementable with the currently available quantum technology
in the lab
Covert Quantum Internet
We apply covert quantum communication based on entanglement generated from
the Minkowski vacuum to the setting of quantum computation and quantum
networks. Our approach hides the generation and distribution of entanglement in
quantum networks by taking advantage of relativistic quantum effects. We devise
a suite of covert quantum teleportation protocols that utilize the shared
entanglement, local operations, and covert classical communication to transfer
or process quantum information in stealth. As an application of our covert
suite, we construct two prominent examples of measurement-based quantum
computation, namely the teleportation-based quantum computer and the one-way
quantum computer. In the latter case we explore the covert generation of graph
states, and subsequently outline a protocol for the covert implementation of
universal blind quantum computation.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
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