The power of quantum circuits in sampling
By: Guy Blanc , Caleb Koch , Jane Lange and more
Potential Business Impact:
Quantum computers solve problems impossible for regular computers.
We give new evidence that quantum circuits are substantially more powerful than classical circuits. We show, relative to a random oracle, that polynomial-size quantum circuits can sample distributions that subexponential-size classical circuits cannot approximate even to TV distance $1-o(1)$. Prior work of Aaronson and Arkhipov (2011) showed such a separation for the case of exact sampling (i.e. TV distance $0$), but separations for approximate sampling were only known for uniform algorithms. A key ingredient in our proof is a new hardness amplification lemma for the classical query complexity of the Yamakawa-Zhandry (2022) search problem. We show that the probability that any family of query algorithms collectively finds $k$ distinct solutions decays exponentially in $k$.
Similar Papers
Quantum Advantage from Sampling Shallow Circuits: Beyond Hardness of Marginals
Computational Complexity
Quantum computers solve problems classical computers can't.
Quantum advantage from effective $200$-qubit holographic random circuit sampling
Quantum Physics
Makes quantum computers solve harder problems faster.
Classically Sampling Noisy Quantum Circuits in Quasi-Polynomial Time under Approximate Markovianity
Quantum Physics
Makes noisy quantum computers no better than regular ones.