English

Robust Randomness Amplifiers: Upper and Lower Bounds

Quantum Physics 2013-06-25 v2

Abstract

A recent sequence of works, initially motivated by the study of the nonlocal properties of entanglement, demonstrate that a source of information-theoretically certified randomness can be constructed based only on two simple assumptions: the prior existence of a short random seed and the ability to ensure that two black-box devices do not communicate (i.e. are non-signaling). We call protocols achieving such certified amplification of a short random seed randomness amplifiers. We introduce a simple framework in which we initiate the systematic study of the possibilities and limitations of randomness amplifiers. Our main results include a new, improved analysis of a robust randomness amplifier with exponential expansion, as well as the first upper bounds on the maximum expansion achievable by a broad class of randomness amplifiers. In particular, we show that non-adaptive randomness amplifiers that are robust to noise cannot achieve more than doubly exponential expansion. Finally, we show that a wide class of protocols based on the use of the CHSH game can only lead to (singly) exponential expansion if adversarial devices are allowed the full power of non-signaling strategies. Our upper bound results apply to all known non-adaptive randomness amplifier constructions to date.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1305.6626,
  title  = {Robust Randomness Amplifiers: Upper and Lower Bounds},
  author = {Matthew Coudron and Thomas Vidick and Henry Yuen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1305.6626},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

28 pages. Comments welcome

R2 v1 2026-06-22T00:24:08.680Z