English

Two Classical Queries versus One Quantum Query

Quantum Physics 2007-05-23 v2 Computational Complexity

Abstract

In this note we study the power of so called query-limited computers. We compare the strength of a classical computer that is allowed to ask two questions to an NP-oracle with the strength of a quantum computer that is allowed only one such query. It is shown that any decision problem that requires two parallel (non-adaptive) SAT-queries on a classical computer can also be solved exactly by a quantum computer using only one SAT-oracle call, where both computations have polynomial time-complexity. Such a simulation is generally believed to be impossible for a one-query classical computer. The reduction also does not hold if we replace the SAT-oracle by a general black-box. This result gives therefore an example of how a quantum computer is probably more powerful than a classical computer. It also highlights the potential differences between quantum complexity results for general oracles when compared to results for more structured tasks like the SAT-problem.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.quant-ph/9806090,
  title  = {Two Classical Queries versus One Quantum Query},
  author = {Wim van Dam},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/9806090},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

6 pages, LaTeX2e, no figures, minor changes and corrections