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Quantum states cannot be transmitted efficiently classically

Quantum Physics 2019-07-03 v3 Computational Complexity

Abstract

We show that any classical two-way communication protocol with shared randomness that can approximately simulate the result of applying an arbitrary measurement (held by one party) to a quantum state of nn qubits (held by another), up to constant accuracy, must transmit at least Ω(2n)\Omega(2^n) bits. This lower bound is optimal and matches the complexity of a simple protocol based on discretisation using an ϵ\epsilon-net. The proof is based on a lower bound on the classical communication complexity of a distributed variant of the Fourier sampling problem. We obtain two optimal quantum-classical separations as easy corollaries. First, a sampling problem which can be solved with one quantum query to the input, but which requires Ω(N)\Omega(N) classical queries for an input of size NN. Second, a nonlocal task which can be solved using nn Bell pairs, but for which any approximate classical solution must communicate Ω(2n)\Omega(2^n) bits.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1612.06546,
  title  = {Quantum states cannot be transmitted efficiently classically},
  author = {Ashley Montanaro},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1612.06546},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

24 pages; v3: accepted version incorporating many minor corrections and clarifications