Sculpting Quantum Speedups
Scott Aaronson, Shalev Ben-David

TL;DR
This paper characterizes when functions can be restricted to promise problems that exhibit exponential quantum speedups, revealing deep relationships between classical and quantum query complexities and exploring sculpting in both query and Turing machine models.
Contribution
It provides a full characterization of sculptable functions in query complexity and introduces new relationships between quantum and classical complexities, also extending to the Turing machine model.
Findings
Characterization of sculptable functions based on certificate complexity.
Quadratic relationship between quantum and deterministic query complexities.
Existence of promise restrictions that separate BQP and BPP under certain assumptions.
Abstract
Given a problem which is intractable for both quantum and classical algorithms, can we find a sub-problem for which quantum algorithms provide an exponential advantage? We refer to this problem as the "sculpting problem." In this work, we give a full characterization of sculptable functions in the query complexity setting. We show that a total function f can be restricted to a promise P such that Q(f|_P)=O(polylog(N)) and R(f|_P)=N^{Omega(1)}, if and only if f has a large number of inputs with large certificate complexity. The proof uses some interesting techniques: for one direction, we introduce new relationships between randomized and quantum query complexity in various settings, and for the other direction, we use a recent result from communication complexity due to Klartag and Regev. We also characterize sculpting for other query complexity measures, such as R(f) vs. R_0(f) and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
