TL;DR
This paper introduces Fermion Sampling with magic input states as a robust quantum advantage scheme using fermionic linear optics, demonstrating strong hardness guarantees and potential for experimental realization.
Contribution
It establishes a fermionic analogue of Boson Sampling with proven anticoncentration and average-case hardness, extending the computational complexity landscape of quantum sampling.
Findings
Proves anticoncentration for random FLO circuits.
Establishes robust average-case hardness of probability computation.
Highlights experimental feasibility with existing quantum architectures.
Abstract
Fermionic Linear Optics (FLO) is a restricted model of quantum computation which in its original form is known to be efficiently classically simulable. We show that, when initialized with suitable input states, FLO circuits can be used to demonstrate quantum computational advantage with strong hardness guarantees. Based on this, we propose a quantum advantage scheme which is a fermionic analogue of Boson Sampling: Fermion Sampling with magic input states. We consider in parallel two classes of circuits: particle-number conserving (passive) FLO and active FLO that preserves only fermionic parity and is closely related to Matchgate circuits introduced by Valiant. Mathematically, these classes of circuits can be understood as fermionic representations of the Lie groups and . This observation allows us to prove our main technical results. We first show anticoncentration for…
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