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Exploring the Limits of the Efficiently Computable Research Directions I Like In Complexity and Physics Scott Aaronson (MIT) Papers and slides at www.scottaaronson.com
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Quantum Mechanics in One Slide Quantum Mechanics: Linear transformations that conserve 2-norm of amplitude vectors: Unitary matrices Probability Theory: Linear transformations that conserve 1-norm of probability vectors: Stochastic matrices
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A general entangled state of n qubits requires ~2 n amplitudes to specify: Quantum Computing Presents an obvious practical problem when using conventional computers to simulate quantum mechanics Feynman 1981: So then why not turn things around, and build computers that themselves exploit superposition? Could such a machine get any advantage over a classical computer with a random number generator? If so, it would have to come from interference between amplitudes
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BQP (Bounded-Error Quantum Polynomial-Time): The class of problems solvable efficiently by a quantum computer, defined by Bernstein and Vazirani in 1993 Shor 1994: Factoring integers is in BQP NP NP-complete P Factoring BQP Interesting
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1. Meeting Experimentalists Halfway Using complexity theory to find quantum advantage in systems of current experimental interest (e.g. linear-optical networks), which fall short of universal quantum computers 2. Publicly-Verifiable Quantum Money First scheme based on a “standard” crypto assumption 3. Rise and Fall of Complexity in Thermodynamic Systems Resource-bounded sophistication and coffee cups This Talk: Three Recent Directions
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1. Meeting Experimentalists Halfway
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BosonSampling (A.-Arkhipov 2011) A rudimentary type of quantum computing, involving only non-interacting photons Classical counterpart: Galton’s Board Replacing the balls by photons leads to famously counterintuitive phenomena, like the Hong-Ou-Mandel dip
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In general, we consider a network of beamsplitters, with n input “modes” (locations) and m>>n output modes n identical photons enter, one per input mode Assume for simplicity they all leave in different modes—there are possibilities The beamsplitter network defines a column-orthonormal matrix A C m n, such that where n n submatrix of A corresponding to S Amazing connection between permanents and physics, which even leads to a simpler proof of Valiant’s famous result that the permanent is #P-complete [A. 2011]
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So, Can We Use Quantum Optics to Solve a #P-Complete Problem? Explanation: If X is sub-unitary, then |Per(X)| 2 will usually be exponentially small. So to get a reasonable estimate of |Per(X)| 2 for a given X, we’d generally need to repeat the optical experiment exponentially many times That sounds way too good to be true…
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Better idea: Given A C m n as input, let BosonSampling be the problem of merely sampling from the same distribution D A that the beamsplitter network samples from—the one defined by Pr[S]=|Per(A S )| 2 Theorem (A.-Arkhipov 2011): Suppose BosonSampling is solvable in classical polynomial time. Then P #P =BPP NP Better Theorem: Suppose we can sample D A even approximately in classical polynomial time. Then in BPP NP, it’s possible to estimate Per(X), with high probability over a Gaussian random matrix Upshot: Compared to (say) Shor’s factoring algorithm, we get different/stronger evidence that a weaker system can do something classically hard We conjecture that the above problem is already #P-complete. If it is, then a fast classical algorithm for approximate BosonSampling would already have the consequence that P #P =BPP NP
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Prove #P-completeness for natural average-case approximation problems (like permanents of Gaussians)— thereby yielding hardness for approximate BosonSampling As a first step, understand the distribution of Per(X), X Gaussian Early experimental implementations have been done (Rome, Brisbane, Vienna, Oxford)! But so far with just 3-4 photons. For scaling, will be crucial to understand the complexity of BosonSampling when a constant fraction of photons are lost Can the BosonSampling model solve hard “conventional” problems? How do we verify that a BosonSampling device is working correctly? [A.-Arkhipov 2014, A.-Nguyen 2014] BosonSampling with thermal states: fast classical algorithm to approximate Per(X) when X is positive semidefinite? Challenges
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Can a quantum computer solve problems for which a classical computer can’t even efficiently verify the answers? Or better yet: that are still classically hard even if P=NP? BQP vs. the Polynomial Hierarchy BosonSampling: A candidate for such a problem. If it’s solvable anywhere in BPP PH, then PH collapses. A. 2009: Unconditionally, there’s a black-box sampling problem (Fourier Sampling) solvable in BQP but not in BPP PH Boils down to: are there problems in BQP but not in PH? Given a Boolean function output z {0,1} n with probability
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What’s the largest possible quantum speedup? “Forrelation”: Given two Boolean functions f,g:{0,1} n {-1,1}, estimate how correlated g is with the Fourier transform of f: A.-Ambainis 2014: This problem is solvable using only 1 quantum query, but requires at least ~2 n/2 /n queries classically Furthermore, this separation is essentially the largest possible! Any N-bit problem that’s solvable with k quantum queries, is also solvable with ~N 1-1/2k classical queries Conjecture (A. 2009): Forrelation Polynomial Hierarchy
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2. Publicly-Verifiable Quantum Money
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Quantum Money Idea: Quantum states that can be created by a bank, traded as currency, and verified as legitimate, but can’t be cloned by counterfeiters, because of quantum mechanics’ No-Cloning Theorem A.-Christiano 2012: First quantum money scheme where anyone can verify a bill, and whose security is based on a “conventional” crypto assumption Wiesner ca. 1970: First quantum money scheme, but only the bank could verify the bills. If anyone can verify a bill, then computational assumptions clearly needed, in addition to QM
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Our Hidden Subspace Scheme Quantum money state: Corresponding “serial number” s: Somehow describes how to check membership in A and in A (the dual subspace of A), yet doesn’t reveal A or A Our proposal: Random low-degree polynomials p 1,…,p m and q 1,…,q m that vanish on A and A respectively Mint can easily choose a random A and prepare |A
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Procedure to Verify Money State (assuming ability to decide membership in A and A ) AA A 1.Project onto A elements (reject if this fails) 2.Hadamard all n qubits to map |A to |A 3.Project onto A elements (reject if this fails) 4.Hadamard all n qubits to return state to |A Theorem: The above just implements a projection onto |A —i.e., it accepts | with probability | |A | 2
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Security Theorem: There’s no efficient counterfeiting procedure, assuming there’s no an efficient quantum algorithm to learn a basis for A with 2 -O(n) probability, given p 1,…,p m and q 1,…,q m. [Recently: Attack on noiseless version of scheme] Theorem: If the A and A membership tests are black boxes, then any counterfeiting procedure requires Ω(2 n/2 ) queries to them.
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3. Rise and Fall of Complexity in Thermodynamic Systems
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How to Measure Interesting Structure? Can define structure and in many other ways One simpleminded measure: the Kolmogorov complexity of a coarse-grained description of our cellular automaton or other system Sean Carroll’s example:
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The Coffee Automaton A., Carroll, Mohan, Ouellette, Werness 2015: A probabilistic n n reversible system that starts half “coffee” and half “cream.” At each time step, we randomly “shear” half the coffee cup horizontally or vertically (assuming a toroidal cup) We prove that the apparent complexity of this image has a rising-falling pattern, with a maximum of at least ~n 1/6
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Quantum lower bound for the collision problem [A. 2002] Quantum (+classical!) lower bound for local search [A. 2004] First direct product theorem for quantum search [A. 2004] PostBQP = PP [A. 2004] BQP/qpoly QMA/poly, learnability of quantum states [A.- Drucker 2010, A. 2004, A. 2006] Algebrization [A.-Wigderson 2008] Other Work
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Some Future Directions Quantum copy-protected software Complexity theory of quantum states and unitary transformations Classification of quantum gate sets Noisy BosonSampling The power of quantum proofs See also my talk at Perimeter on Wednesday at 10:30, for complexity and quantum gravity!
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