English

Classical simulation complexity of extended Clifford circuits

Quantum Physics 2013-06-04 v1 Computational Complexity

Abstract

Clifford gates are a winsome class of quantum operations combining mathematical elegance with physical significance. The Gottesman-Knill theorem asserts that Clifford computations can be classically efficiently simulated but this is true only in a suitably restricted setting. Here we consider Clifford computations with a variety of additional ingredients: (a) strong vs. weak simulation, (b) inputs being computational basis states vs. general product states, (c) adaptive vs. non-adaptive choices of gates for circuits involving intermediate measurements, (d) single line outputs vs. multi-line outputs. We consider the classical simulation complexity of all combinations of these ingredients and show that many are not classically efficiently simulatable (subject to common complexity assumptions such as P not equal to NP). Our results reveal a surprising proximity of classical to quantum computing power viz. a class of classically simulatable quantum circuits which yields universal quantum computation if extended by a purely classical additional ingredient that does not extend the class of quantum processes occurring.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1305.6190,
  title  = {Classical simulation complexity of extended Clifford circuits},
  author = {Richard Jozsa and Maarten Van den Nest},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1305.6190},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

17 pages, 1 figure

R2 v1 2026-06-22T00:23:06.816Z