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Exact Quantum Circuit Optimization is co-NQP-hard

Published: October 18, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2510.16420v1

By: Adam Husted Kjelstrøm, Andreas Pavlogiannis, Jaco van de Pol

Potential Business Impact:

Makes quantum computers use fewer parts.

Business Areas:
Quantum Computing Science and Engineering

As quantum computing resources remain scarce and error rates high, minimizing the resource consumption of quantum circuits is essential for achieving practical quantum advantage. Here we consider the natural problem of, given a circuit $C$, computing an equivalent circuit $C'$ that minimizes a quantum resource type, expressed as the count or depth of (i) arbitrary gates, or (ii) non-Clifford gates, or (iii) superposition gates, or (iv) entanglement gates. We show that, when $C$ is expressed over any gate set that can implement the H and TOF gates exactly, each of the above optimization problems is hard for $\text{co-NQP}$, and hence outside the Polynomial Hierarchy, unless the Polynomial Hierarchy collapses. This strengthens recent results in the literature which established an $\text{NP}$-hardness lower bound, and tightens the gap to the corresponding $\text{NP}^\text{NQP}$ upper bound known for cases (i)-(iii) over Clifford+T and (i)-(iv) over H+TOF circuits.

Page Count
11 pages

Category
Physics:
Quantum Physics