Constructive Post-Quantum Reductions
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2203.02314v1
- Date: Fri, 4 Mar 2022 13:46:34 GMT
- Title: Constructive Post-Quantum Reductions
- Authors: Nir Bitansky and Zvika Brakerski and Yael Tauman Kalai
- Abstract summary: We present positive and negative results for converting large classes of classical reductions to the postquantum setting.
We put forth a framework for reductions (or general interaction) with stateful solvers for a computational problem.
- Score: 18.527533843982905
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Is it possible to convert classical cryptographic reductions into
post-quantum ones? It is customary to argue that while this is problematic in
the interactive setting, non-interactive reductions do carry over. However,
when considering quantum auxiliary input, this conversion results in a
non-constructive post-quantum reduction that requires duplicating the quantum
auxiliary input, which is in general inefficient or even impossible. This
violates the win-win premise of provable cryptography: an attack against a
cryptographic primitive should lead to an algorithmic advantage.
We initiate the study of constructive quantum reductions and present positive
and negative results for converting large classes of classical reductions to
the post-quantum setting in a constructive manner. We show that any
non-interactive non-adaptive reduction from assumptions with a polynomial
solution space (such as decision assumptions) can be made post-quantum
constructive. In contrast, assumptions with super-polynomial solution space
(such as general search assumptions) cannot be generally converted.
Along the way, we make several additional contributions:
1. We put forth a framework for reductions (or general interaction) with
stateful solvers for a computational problem, that may change their internal
state between consecutive calls. We show that such solvers can still be
utilized. This framework and our results are meaningful even in the classical
setting.
2. A consequence of our negative result is that quantum auxiliary input that
is useful against a problem with a super-polynomial solution space cannot be
generically ``restored'' post-measurement. This shows that the novel rewinding
technique of Chiesa et al. (FOCS 2021) is tight in the sense that it cannot be
extended beyond a polynomial measurement space.
Related papers
- QSETH strikes again: finer quantum lower bounds for lattice problem,
strong simulation, hitting set problem, and more [5.69353915790503]
There are problems for which there is no trivial' computational advantage possible with the current quantum hardware.
We would like to have evidence that it is difficult to solve those problems on quantum computers; but what is their exact complexity?
By the use of the QSETH framework [Buhrman-Patro-Speelman 2021], we are able to understand the quantum complexity of a few natural variants of CNFSAT.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-09-28T13:30:20Z) - Quantum Query Complexity of Boolean Functions under Indefinite Causal
Order [0.9208007322096533]
We study the query complexity of Boolean functions under general higher order quantum computations.
We show that the recently introduced class of quantum circuits with quantum control of causal order cannot lead to any reduction in query complexity.
We find some functions for which the minimum error with which they can be computed using two queries is strictly lower when exploiting causally indefinite supermaps.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-07-18T13:12:55Z) - Fault-tolerant quantum algorithms [0.0]
The framework of this thesis is fault-tolerant quantum algorithms.
Grover's algorithm and quantum walks are described in Chapter 2.
Hamiltonian simulation will enable the use of quantum phase estimation.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-01-19T13:08:22Z) - One-Way Ticket to Las Vegas and the Quantum Adversary [78.33558762484924]
We show that quantum Las Vegas query complexity is exactly equal to the quantum adversary bound.
This is achieved by transforming a feasible solution to the adversary inversion problem into a quantum query algorithm.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-01-05T11:05:22Z) - Quantum Worst-Case to Average-Case Reductions for All Linear Problems [66.65497337069792]
We study the problem of designing worst-case to average-case reductions for quantum algorithms.
We provide an explicit and efficient transformation of quantum algorithms that are only correct on a small fraction of their inputs into ones that are correct on all inputs.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-12-06T22:01:49Z) - Efficient Bipartite Entanglement Detection Scheme with a Quantum
Adversarial Solver [89.80359585967642]
Proposal reformulates the bipartite entanglement detection as a two-player zero-sum game completed by parameterized quantum circuits.
We experimentally implement our protocol on a linear optical network and exhibit its effectiveness to accomplish the bipartite entanglement detection for 5-qubit quantum pure states and 2-qubit quantum mixed states.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-03-15T09:46:45Z) - Resource Optimisation of Coherently Controlled Quantum Computations with
the PBS-calculus [55.2480439325792]
Coherent control of quantum computations can be used to improve some quantum protocols and algorithms.
We refine the PBS-calculus, a graphical language for coherent control inspired by quantum optics.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-02-10T18:59:52Z) - Using Shor's algorithm on near term Quantum computers: a reduced version [0.0]
We introduce a reduced version of Shor's algorithm that proposes a step forward in increasing the range of numbers that can be factorized on noisy Quantum devices.
In particular, we have found noteworthy results in most cases, often being able to factor the given number with only one of the proposed algorithm.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-12-23T15:36:59Z) - Depth-efficient proofs of quantumness [77.34726150561087]
A proof of quantumness is a type of challenge-response protocol in which a classical verifier can efficiently certify quantum advantage of an untrusted prover.
In this paper, we give two proof of quantumness constructions in which the prover need only perform constant-depth quantum circuits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-07-05T17:45:41Z) - Efficient simulatability of continuous-variable circuits with large
Wigner negativity [62.997667081978825]
Wigner negativity is known to be a necessary resource for computational advantage in several quantum-computing architectures.
We identify vast families of circuits that display large, possibly unbounded, Wigner negativity, and yet are classically efficiently simulatable.
We derive our results by establishing a link between the simulatability of high-dimensional discrete-variable quantum circuits and bosonic codes.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-05-25T11:03:42Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.