The Magical Number Seven: An Unexpected Dimensional Threshold in Quantum Communication Complexity
Armin Tavakoli, Marcin Pawlowski, Marek Zukowski, Mohamed Bourennane

TL;DR
This paper reveals a surprising dimension-dependent threshold at seven in quantum communication complexity, where transmitting quantum systems surpasses entanglement-assisted classical communication, challenging prior assumptions about their equivalence.
Contribution
The study introduces a family of dimension-parametrized communication problems showing a sharp transition at dimension seven, where quantum transmission outperforms entanglement-assisted classical communication.
Findings
Performance equality at low dimensions
Breakdown of equivalence at dimension seven
Quantum transmission surpasses classical communication with strong correlations
Abstract
Entanglement-assisted classical communication and transmission of a quantum system are the two quantum resources for information processing. Many information tasks can be performed using either quantum resource. However, this equivalence is not always present since entanglement assisted classical communication is known to sometimes be the better performing resource. Here, we show not only the opposite phenomenon; that there exists tasks for which transmission of a quantum system is a more powerful resource than entanglement assisted classical communication, but also that such phenomena can have a surprisingly strong dependence on the dimension of Hilbert space. We introduce a family of communication complexity problems parametrized by dimension of Hilbert space and study the performance of each quantum resource. We find that for low dimensions, the two resources perform equally well,…
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