Sequential measurements, disturbance and property testing
Aram W. Harrow, Cedric Yen-Yu Lin, Ashley Montanaro

TL;DR
This paper introduces two procedures for distinguishing quantum states under measurement disturbance, with applications in quantum property testing, isomorphism testing, and correcting prior protocol results.
Contribution
It presents novel measurement procedures that handle disturbance, enabling efficient quantum property and isomorphism testing, and corrects a previous result on quantum protocol de-Merlinization.
Findings
Quantum algorithms for isomorphism testing with fewer queries
State property testing with logarithmic copies
Efficient multipartite entanglement testing
Abstract
We describe two procedures which, given access to one copy of a quantum state and a sequence of two-outcome measurements, can distinguish between the case that at least one of the measurements accepts the state with high probability, and the case that all of the measurements have low probability of acceptance. The measurements cannot simply be tried in sequence, because early measurements may disturb the state being tested. One procedure is based on a variant of Marriott-Watrous amplification. The other procedure is based on the use of a test for this disturbance, which is applied with low probability. We find a number of applications. First, quantum query complexity separations in the property testing model for testing isomorphism of functions under group actions. We give quantum algorithms for testing isomorphism, linear isomorphism and affine isomorphism of boolean functions which…
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