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Quantum and Classical Tradeoffs

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abstract

We propose an approach for quantifying a quantum circuit's quantumness as a means to understand the nature of quantum algorithmic speedups. Since quantum gates that do not preserve the computational basis are necessary for achieving quantum speedups, it appears natural to define the quantumness of a quantum circuit using the number of such gates. Intuitively, a reduction in the quantumness requires an increase in the amount of classical computation, hence giving a ``quantum and classical tradeoff''. In this paper we present two results on this direction. The first gives an asymptotic answer to the question: ``what is the minimum number of non-basis-preserving gates required to generate a good approximation to a given state''. This question is the quantum analogy of the following classical question, ``how many fair coins are needed to generate a given probability distribution'', which was studied and resolved by Knuth and Yao in 1976. Our second result shows that any quantum algorithm that solves Grover's Problem of size n using k queries and l levels of non-basis-preserving gates must have k*l=\Omega(n).

fields

quant-ph 1

years

2025 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

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The Guided Local Hamiltonian Problem for Stoquastic Hamiltonians

quant-ph · 2025-09-30 · unverdicted · novelty 8.0

The Guided Local Hamiltonian problem for stoquastic Hamiltonians is promise BPP-hard (even 2-local on lattices), BQP-hard under fixed local constraints, and admits a deterministic classical approximation algorithm when promise gap, overlap, and spectral gap are constant with constant-depth local-pre

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  • The Guided Local Hamiltonian Problem for Stoquastic Hamiltonians quant-ph · 2025-09-30 · unverdicted · none · ref 33 · internal anchor

    The Guided Local Hamiltonian problem for stoquastic Hamiltonians is promise BPP-hard (even 2-local on lattices), BQP-hard under fixed local constraints, and admits a deterministic classical approximation algorithm when promise gap, overlap, and spectral gap are constant with constant-depth local-pre