Trading locality for time: certifiable randomness from low-depth circuits
Matthew Coudron, Jalex Stark, Thomas Vidick

TL;DR
This paper introduces a protocol for certifiable randomness expansion using low-depth quantum circuits on a 2D lattice, which is efficiently verifiable and relies on physical assumptions rather than complex conjectures.
Contribution
It presents a novel randomness expansion protocol based on constant-depth quantum circuits that is robust, verifiable in linear time, and does not depend on complexity-theoretic conjectures.
Findings
Achieves exponential certified randomness expansion with simple quantum circuits.
Verification of output is efficient, requiring only linear time.
Protocol tolerates small additive errors, enhancing noise robustness.
Abstract
The generation of certifiable randomness is the most fundamental information-theoretic task that meaningfully separates quantum devices from their classical counterparts. We propose a protocol for exponential certified randomness expansion using a single quantum device. The protocol calls for the device to implement a simple quantum circuit of constant depth on a 2D lattice of qubits. The output of the circuit can be verified classically in linear time, and is guaranteed to contain a polynomial number of certified random bits assuming that the device used to generate the output operated using a (classical or quantum) circuit of sub-logarithmic depth. This assumption contrasts with the locality assumption used for randomness certification based on Bell inequality violation or computational assumptions. To demonstrate randomness generation it is sufficient for a device to sample from the…
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