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Separating Pseudorandom Generators from Logarithmic Pseudorandom States

Published: October 23, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2510.20131v1

By: Mohammed Barhoush

Potential Business Impact:

Makes secret codes harder to break with quantum computers.

Business Areas:
Quantum Computing Science and Engineering

Pseudorandom generators (PRGs) are a foundational primitive in classical cryptography, underpinning a wide range of constructions. In the quantum setting, pseudorandom quantum states (PRSs) were proposed as a potentially weaker assumption that might serve as a substitute for PRGs in cryptographic applications. Two primary size regimes of PRSs have been studied: logarithmic-size and linear-size. Interestingly, logarithmic PRSs have led to powerful cryptographic applications, such as digital signatures and quantum public-key encryption, that have not been realized from their linear counterparts. However, PRGs have only been black-box separated from linear PRSs, leaving open the fundamental question of whether PRGs are also separated from logarithmic PRSs. In this work, we resolve this open problem. We establish a quantum black-box separation between (quantum-evaluable) PRGs and PRSs of either size regime. Specifically, we construct a unitary quantum oracle with inverse access relative to which no black-box construction of PRG from (logarithmic or linear) PRS exists. As a direct corollary, we obtain separations between PRGs and several primitives implied by logarithmic PRSs, including digital signatures and quantum public-key encryption.

Page Count
18 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Cryptography and Security