Affiliation:
1. Department of Computer Science, University of Warwick, UK
2. Department of Mathematics, UC Berkeley, USA & Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford, UK
3. Department of Computer Science, Georgetown University, USA
Abstract
We initiate the systematic study of QMA algorithms in the setting of property testing, to which we refer as QMA proofs of proximity (QMAPs). These are quantum query algorithms that receive explicit access to a sublinear-size untrusted proof and are required to accept inputs having a property Π and reject inputs that are ε-far from Π, while only probing a minuscule portion of their input.We investigate the complexity landscape of this model, showing that QMAPs can be exponentially stronger than both classical proofs of proximity and quantum testers. To this end, we extend the methodology of Blais, Brody, and Matulef (Computational Complexity, 2012) to prove quantum property testing lower bounds via reductions from communication complexity. This also resolves a question raised in 2013 by Montanaro and de Wolf (cf. Theory of Computing, 2016).Our algorithmic results include a purpose an algorithmic framework that enables quantum speedups for testing an expressive class of properties, namely, those that are succinctly decomposable. A consequence of this framework is a QMA algorithm to verify the Parity of an n-bit string with O(n2/3) queries and proof length. We also propose a QMA algorithm for testing graph bipartitneness, a property that lies outside of this family, for which there is a quantum speedup.
Funder
UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship
QLCI program, National Science Foundation
NSF CAREER award
NSF SPX award
DARPA
Publisher
Verein zur Forderung des Open Access Publizierens in den Quantenwissenschaften
Subject
Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous),Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Cited by
1 articles.
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