Classical and quantum partition bound and detector inefficiency
S. Laplante, V. Lerays, J. Roland

TL;DR
This paper introduces new lower bounds on quantum and randomized communication complexity based on efficiency and partition bounds, connecting them to Bell and Tsirelson inequalities, with implications for quantum experiments and communication protocols.
Contribution
It establishes the efficiency bound as a strong lower bound that generalizes previous methods and links it to Bell inequalities, providing a new convex optimization framework.
Findings
The efficiency bound subsumes all known randomized communication complexity bounds.
A quantum distribution with exponentially larger violation than normalized Bell inequalities.
The quantum one-way partition bound is tight for classical communication with shared entanglement.
Abstract
We study randomized and quantum efficiency lower bounds in communication complexity. These arise from the study of zero-communication protocols in which players are allowed to abort. Our scenario is inspired by the physics setup of Bell experiments, where two players share a predefined entangled state but are not allowed to communicate. Each is given a measurement as input, which they perform on their share of the system. The outcomes of the measurements should follow a distribution predicted by quantum mechanics; however, in practice, the detectors may fail to produce an output in some of the runs. The efficiency of the experiment is the probability that the experiment succeeds (neither of the detectors fails). When the players share a quantum state, this gives rise to a new bound on quantum communication complexity (eff*) that subsumes the factorization norm. When players share…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplexity and Algorithms in Graphs · Computability, Logic, AI Algorithms · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
