English

Sampling of min-entropy relative to quantum knowledge

Quantum Physics 2012-06-04 v1

Abstract

Let X_1, ..., X_n be a sequence of n classical random variables and consider a sample of r positions selected at random. Then, except with (exponentially in r) small probability, the min-entropy of the sample is not smaller than, roughly, a fraction r/n of the total min-entropy of all positions X_1, ..., X_n, which is optimal. Here, we show that this statement, originally proven by Vadhan [LNCS, vol. 2729, Springer, 2003] for the purely classical case, is still true if the min-entropy is measured relative to a quantum system. Because min-entropy quantifies the amount of randomness that can be extracted from a given random variable, our result can be used to prove the soundness of locally computable extractors in a context where side information might be quantum-mechanical. In particular, it implies that key agreement in the bounded-storage model (using a standard sample-and-hash protocol) is fully secure against quantum adversaries, thus solving a long-standing open problem.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0712.4291,
  title  = {Sampling of min-entropy relative to quantum knowledge},
  author = {Robert Koenig and Renato Renner},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0712.4291},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

48 pages, latex

R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:57:55.656Z