Rigidity of quantum steering and one-sided device-independent verifiable quantum computation
Alexandru Gheorghiu, Petros Wallden, Elham Kashefi

TL;DR
This paper establishes a robust one-sided device-independent framework for quantum steering, providing a new rigidity theorem and an efficient protocol for verifiable delegated quantum computation with reduced trust assumptions.
Contribution
It introduces a nearly optimal self-testing method for quantum steering, improving the overhead compared to previous fully device-independent results.
Findings
Rigidity theorem for maximal steering correlations
A one-sided device-independent protocol for verifiable quantum computation
Shared states in certain protocols are unitarily equivalent to Bell states
Abstract
The relationship between correlations and entanglement has played a major role in understanding quantum theory since the work of Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen (1935). Tsirelson (1980) proved that Bell states, shared among two parties, when measured suitably, achieve the maximum non-local correlations allowed by quantum mechanics. Conversely, Reichardt, Unger and Vazirani (2013) showed that observing the maximal correlation value over a sequence of repeated measurements, implies that the underlying quantum state is close to a tensor product of maximally entangled states and, moreover, that it is measured according to an ideal strategy. However, this strong rigidity result comes at a high price, requiring a large number of entangled pairs to be tested. In this paper, we present a significant improvement in terms of the overhead by instead considering quantum steering where the device of…
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