Two-message quantum interactive proofs and the quantum separability problem
Patrick Hayden, Kevin Milner, and Mark M. Wilde

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the computational hardness of the quantum separability problem, introduces a two-message quantum interactive proof system for it, and explores its complexity within quantum computational classes.
Contribution
It presents the first two-message quantum interactive proof system for the quantum separability problem and establishes its NP-hardness and QSZK-hardness, linking it to fundamental complexity classes.
Findings
Quantum separability problem is NP-hard with respect to Cook reductions.
A two-message quantum interactive proof system can decide the problem.
The problem is complete for the class QIP.
Abstract
Suppose that a polynomial-time mixed-state quantum circuit, described as a sequence of local unitary interactions followed by a partial trace, generates a quantum state shared between two parties. One might then wonder, does this quantum circuit produce a state that is separable or entangled? Here, we give evidence that it is computationally hard to decide the answer to this question, even if one has access to the power of quantum computation. We begin by exhibiting a two-message quantum interactive proof system that can decide the answer to a promise version of the question. We then prove that the promise problem is hard for the class of promise problems with "quantum statistical zero knowledge" (QSZK) proof systems by demonstrating a polynomial-time Karp reduction from the QSZK-complete promise problem "quantum state distinguishability" to our quantum separability problem. By…
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