Resource analysis for quantum-aided Byzantine agreement with the four-qubit singlet state
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2207.04939v2
- Date: Thu, 18 Apr 2024 06:26:43 GMT
- Title: Resource analysis for quantum-aided Byzantine agreement with the four-qubit singlet state
- Authors: Zoltán Guba, István Finta, Ákos Budai, Lóránt Farkas, Zoltán Zimborás, András Pályi,
- Abstract summary: In distributed computing, a Byzantine fault is a condition where a component behaves inconsistently, showing different symptoms to different components of the system.
Our work highlights important engineering aspects of the future deployment of quantum communication protocols with multi-qubit entangled states.
- Score: 1.2094859111770522
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: In distributed computing, a Byzantine fault is a condition where a component behaves inconsistently, showing different symptoms to different components of the system. Consensus among the correct components can be reached by appropriately crafted communication protocols even in the presence of byzantine faults. Quantum-aided protocols built upon distributed entangled quantum states are worth considering, as they are more resilient than traditional ones. Based on earlier ideas, here we establish a parameter-dependent family of quantum-aided weak broadcast protocols. We compute upper bounds on the failure probability of the protocol, and define and illustrate a procedure that minimizes the quantum resource requirements. Following earlier work demonstrating the suitability of noisy intermediate scale quantum (NISQ) devices for the study of quantum networks, we experimentally create our resource quantum state on publicly available quantum computers. Our work highlights important engineering aspects of the future deployment of quantum communication protocols with multi-qubit entangled states.
Related papers
- A Quantum-Classical Collaborative Training Architecture Based on Quantum
State Fidelity [50.387179833629254]
We introduce a collaborative classical-quantum architecture called co-TenQu.
Co-TenQu enhances a classical deep neural network by up to 41.72% in a fair setting.
It outperforms other quantum-based methods by up to 1.9 times and achieves similar accuracy while utilizing 70.59% fewer qubits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-02-23T14:09:41Z) - Multi-User Entanglement Distribution in Quantum Networks Using Multipath
Routing [55.2480439325792]
We propose three protocols that increase the entanglement rate of multi-user applications by leveraging multipath routing.
The protocols are evaluated on quantum networks with NISQ constraints, including limited quantum memories and probabilistic entanglement generation.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-03-06T18:06:00Z) - Breaking universal limitations on quantum conference key agreement
without quantum memory [6.300599548850421]
We report a measurement-device-independent quantum conference key agreement protocol with enhanced transmission efficiency over lossy channel.
Our protocol can break key rate bounds on quantum communication over quantum network without quantum memory.
Based on our results, we anticipate that our protocol will play an indispensable role in constructing multipartite quantum network.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-12-10T06:37:53Z) - Testing quantum computers with the protocol of quantum state matching [0.0]
The presence of noise in quantum computers hinders their effective operation.
We suggest the application of the so-called quantum state matching protocol for testing purposes.
For systematically varied inputs we find that the device with the smaller quantum volume performs better on our tests than the one with larger quantum volume.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-10-18T08:25:34Z) - Mimicking states with limited resources: passing quantum quiz via global
control [0.0]
We propose, analyze, and optimize a protocol which allows fast simulation of properties of unknown quantum states.
Our protocol, having common features with quantum identification and shortcuts to adiabaticity, permits avoiding adiabaticity catastrophe.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-08-17T23:18:02Z) - Quantum Semantic Communications for Resource-Efficient Quantum Networking [52.3355619190963]
This letter proposes a novel quantum semantic communications (QSC) framework exploiting advancements in quantum machine learning and quantum semantic representations.
The proposed framework achieves approximately 50-75% reduction in quantum communication resources needed, while achieving a higher quantum semantic fidelity.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-05-05T03:49:19Z) - Benchmarking of Quantum Protocols [0.9176056742068812]
We consider several quantum protocols that enable promising functionalities and services in near-future quantum networks.
We use NetSquid simulation platform to evaluate the effect of various sources of noise on the performance of these protocols.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-11-03T21:17:04Z) - Hardware-Efficient, Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computation with Rydberg
Atoms [55.41644538483948]
We provide the first complete characterization of sources of error in a neutral-atom quantum computer.
We develop a novel and distinctly efficient method to address the most important errors associated with the decay of atomic qubits to states outside of the computational subspace.
Our protocols can be implemented in the near-term using state-of-the-art neutral atom platforms with qubits encoded in both alkali and alkaline-earth atoms.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-05-27T23:29:53Z) - Two-party quantum private comparison based on eight-qubit entangled
state [0.7130302992490973]
The purpose of quantum private comparison (QPC) is to solve "Tierce problem" using quantum mechanics laws.
We consider for the first time the usefulness of eight-qubit entangled states for QPC by proposing a new protocol.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-01-05T12:07:45Z) - Direct Quantum Communications in the Presence of Realistic Noisy
Entanglement [69.25543534545538]
We propose a novel quantum communication scheme relying on realistic noisy pre-shared entanglement.
Our performance analysis shows that the proposed scheme offers competitive QBER, yield, and goodput.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-12-22T13:06:12Z) - Using Quantum Metrological Bounds in Quantum Error Correction: A Simple
Proof of the Approximate Eastin-Knill Theorem [77.34726150561087]
We present a proof of the approximate Eastin-Knill theorem, which connects the quality of a quantum error-correcting code with its ability to achieve a universal set of logical gates.
Our derivation employs powerful bounds on the quantum Fisher information in generic quantum metrological protocols.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-04-24T17:58:10Z)
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.