Power of Quantum Computation with Few Clean Qubits
Keisuke Fujii, Hirotada Kobayashi, Tomoyuki Morimae, Harumichi, Nishimura, Shuhei Tamate, Seiichiro Tani

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that quantum computations with very few clean qubits can be error-reduced to exponentially small error rates, revealing their surprising computational power and implications for classical simulation hardness.
Contribution
It proves strong error-reduction properties for limited-qubit quantum computations, showing they can simulate more accurate results with fewer clean qubits than previously known.
Findings
Error reduction from logarithmic to constant or exponential accuracy with minimal clean qubits.
TRACE ESTIMATION problem is complete for certain limited-qubit quantum classes.
Techniques for error reduction may inform classical simulation hardness of DQC1 models.
Abstract
This paper investigates the power of polynomial-time quantum computation in which only a very limited number of qubits are initially clean in the |0> state, and all the remaining qubits are initially in the totally mixed state. No initializations of qubits are allowed during the computation, nor intermediate measurements. The main results of this paper are unexpectedly strong error-reducible properties of such quantum computations. It is proved that any problem solvable by a polynomial-time quantum computation with one-sided bounded error that uses logarithmically many clean qubits can also be solvable with exponentially small one-sided error using just two clean qubits, and with polynomially small one-sided error using just one clean qubit. It is further proved in the case of two-sided bounded error that any problem solvable by such a computation with a constant gap between…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
