
TL;DR
This paper surveys quantum proofs and their associated complexity classes, exploring how quantum information enhances proof systems and introduces new computational paradigms distinct from classical proofs.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of quantum proof systems, their properties, and the complexity classes they define, highlighting recent results and quantum-specific features.
Findings
Quantum proofs utilize superposition for computational advantages.
Quantum interactive proof classes like QIP and QSZK extend classical concepts.
Distinct quantum properties lead to a rich landscape of complexity classes.
Abstract
Quantum information and computation provide a fascinating twist on the notion of proofs in computational complexity theory. For instance, one may consider a quantum computational analogue of the complexity class \class{NP}, known as QMA, in which a quantum state plays the role of a proof (also called a certificate or witness), and is checked by a polynomial-time quantum computation. For some problems, the fact that a quantum proof state could be a superposition over exponentially many classical states appears to offer computational advantages over classical proof strings. In the interactive proof system setting, one may consider a verifier and one or more provers that exchange and process quantum information rather than classical information during an interaction for a given input string, giving rise to quantum complexity classes such as QIP, QSZK, and QMIP* that represent natural…
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