QMA-hardness of Consistency of Local Density Matrices with Applications to Quantum Zero-Knowledge
Anne Broadbent, Alex B. Grilo

TL;DR
This paper proves the QMA-hardness of the Consistency of Local Density Matrices problem, introduces a framework for locally simulatable proofs in QMA, and advances quantum zero-knowledge proof systems.
Contribution
It proves CLDM is QMA-hard under Karp reductions and develops a framework for locally simulatable proofs, enabling new quantum zero-knowledge protocols.
Findings
CLDM is QMA-hard under Karp reductions.
First commit-and-open quantum zero-knowledge proof system for all QMA.
QMA admits a quantum non-interactive zero-knowledge proof system in the secret parameter setting.
Abstract
We provide several advances to the understanding of the class of Quantum Merlin-Arthur proof systems (QMA), the quantum analogue of NP. Our central contribution is proving a longstanding conjecture that the Consistency of Local Density Matrices (CLDM) problem is QMA-hard under Karp reductions. The input of CLDM consists of local reduced density matrices on sets of at most k qubits, and the problem asks if there is an n-qubit global quantum state that is consistent with all of the k-qubit local density matrices. The containment of this problem in QMA and the QMA-hardness under Turing reductions were proved by Liu [APPROX-RANDOM 2006]. Liu also conjectured that CLDM is QMA-hard under Karp reductions, which is desirable for applications, and we finally prove this conjecture. We establish this result using the techniques of simulatable codes of Grilo, Slofstra, and Yuen [FOCS 2019],…
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