English

Distributed Quantum Proofs for Replicated Data

Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing 2021-10-05 v2 Quantum Physics

Abstract

The paper tackles the issue of checking\textit{checking} that all copies of a large data set replicated at several nodes of a network are identical. The fact that the replicas may be located at distant nodes prevents the system from verifying their equality locally, i.e., by having each node consult only nodes in its vicinity. On the other hand, it remains possible to assign certificates\textit{certificates} to the nodes, so that verifying the consistency of the replicas can be achieved locally. However, we show that, as the data set is large, classical certification mechanisms, including distributed Merlin-Arthur protocols, cannot guarantee good completeness and soundness simultaneously, unless they use very large certificates. The main result of this paper is a distributed quantum\textit{quantum} Merlin-Arthur protocol enabling the nodes to collectively check the consistency of the replicas, based on small certificates, and in a single round of message exchange between neighbors, with short messages. In particular, the certificate-size is logarithmic in the size of the data set, which gives an exponential advantage over classical certification mechanisms.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2002.10018,
  title  = {Distributed Quantum Proofs for Replicated Data},
  author = {Pierre Fraigniaud and François Le Gall and Harumichi Nishimura and Ami Paz},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2002.10018},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

To be presented in ITCS 2021