English

Zero-knowledge proof systems for QMA

Quantum Physics 2017-02-09 v1 Cryptography and Security

Abstract

Prior work has established that all problems in NP admit classical zero-knowledge proof systems, and under reasonable hardness assumptions for quantum computations, these proof systems can be made secure against quantum attacks. We prove a result representing a further quantum generalization of this fact, which is that every problem in the complexity class QMA has a quantum zero-knowledge proof system. More specifically, assuming the existence of an unconditionally binding and quantum computationally concealing commitment scheme, we prove that every problem in the complexity class QMA has a quantum interactive proof system that is zero-knowledge with respect to efficient quantum computations. Our QMA proof system is sound against arbitrary quantum provers, but only requires an honest prover to perform polynomial-time quantum computations, provided that it holds a quantum witness for a given instance of the QMA problem under consideration. The proof system relies on a new variant of the QMA-complete local Hamiltonian problem in which the local terms are described by Clifford operations and standard basis measurements. We believe that the QMA-completeness of this problem may have other uses in quantum complexity.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1604.02804,
  title  = {Zero-knowledge proof systems for QMA},
  author = {Anne Broadbent and Zhengfeng Ji and Fang Song and John Watrous},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1604.02804},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

37 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-22T13:29:05.212Z