English

Multiparty Quantum Communication Complexity

Quantum Physics 2007-05-23 v2

Abstract

Quantum entanglement cannot be used to achieve direct communication between remote parties, but it can reduce the communication needed for some problems. Let each of k parties hold some partial input data to some fixed k-variable function f. The communication complexity of f is the minimum number of classical bits required to be broadcasted for every party to know the value of f on their inputs. We construct a function G such that for the one-round communication model and three parties, G can be computed with n+1 bits of communication when the parties share prior entanglement. We then show that without entangled particles, the one-round communication complexity of G is (3/2)n + 1. Next we generalize this function to a function F. We show that if the parties share prior quantum entanglement, then the communication complexity of F is exactly k. We also show that if no entangled particles are provided, then the communication complexity of F is roughly k*log(k). These two results prove for the first time communication complexity separations better than a constant number of bits.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.quant-ph/9710054,
  title  = {Multiparty Quantum Communication Complexity},
  author = {Harry Buhrman and Wim van Dam and Peter Hoyer and Alain Tapp},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/9710054},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

8 pages, LaTeX2e, no figures; new result and author added