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Quantum Online Memory Checking

Quantum Physics 2011-09-02 v1 Computational Complexity

Abstract

The problem of memory checking considers storing files on an unreliable public server whose memory can be modified by a malicious party. The main task is to design an online memory checker with the capability to verify that the information on the server has not been corrupted. To store n bits of public information, the memory checker has s private reliable bits for verification purpose; while to retrieve each bit of public information the checker communicates t bits with the public memory. Earlier work showed that, for classical memory checkers, the lower bound s*t \in Omega(n) holds. In this article we study quantum memory checkers that have s private qubits and that are allowed to quantum query the public memory using t qubits. We prove an exponential improvement over the classical setting by showing the existence of a quantum checker that, using quantum fingerprints, requires only s \in O(log n) qubits of local memory and t \in O(polylog n) qubits of communication with the public memory.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1002.2970,
  title  = {Quantum Online Memory Checking},
  author = {Wim van Dam and Qingqing Yuan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1002.2970},
  year   = {2011}
}

Comments

12 pages; Theory of Quantum Computation, Communication, and Cryptography: Fourth Workshop, TQC 2009

R2 v1 2026-06-21T14:47:17.978Z