Optimal Blind Quantum Computation
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Blind quantum computation allows a client with limited quantum capabilities to interact with a remote quantum computer to perform an arbitrary quantum computation, while keeping the description of that computation hidden from the remote quantum computer. While a number of protocols have been proposed in recent years, little is currently understood about the resources necessary to accomplish the task. Here we present general techniques for upper and lower bounding the quantum communication necessary to perform blind quantum computation, and use these techniques to establish a concrete bounds for common choices of the client's quantum capabilities. Our results show that the UBQC protocol of Broadbent, Fitzsimons and Kashefi [1], comes within a factor of 8/3 of optimal when the client is restricted to preparing single qubits. However, we describe a generalization of this protocol which requires exponentially less quantum communication when the client has a more sophisticated device.
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Cited by 1 Pith paper
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BPBO: Blindness-Preserving Brickwork Optimization by Certified Region Resynthesis
BPBO performs certified local resynthesis on one- to three-wire regions of BFK09 brickwork to reduce pattern size while preserving UBQC blindness, demonstrated on Grover and Toffoli cases with reductions up to 3x725 to 3x98.
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