Tight Bounds for Quantum State Certification with Incoherent Measurements
Sitan Chen, Brice Huang, Jerry Li, Allen Liu

TL;DR
This paper establishes tight bounds on the number of incoherent measurements needed for quantum state certification, showing that adaptivity does not improve efficiency and resolving a key open problem in mixedness testing.
Contribution
The authors prove the optimal copy complexity for mixedness testing with incoherent measurements and extend instance-optimal bounds to arbitrary incoherent measurements, closing a significant gap in the field.
Findings
Optimal copy complexity for mixedness testing established as ^{3/2}/\u03b5^2
Adaptivity does not improve measurement efficiency for these problems
New techniques involving matrix martingales were developed
Abstract
We consider the problem of quantum state certification, where we are given the description of a mixed state , copies of a mixed state , and , and we are asked to determine whether or whether . When is the maximally mixed state , this is known as mixedness testing. We focus on algorithms which use incoherent measurements, i.e. which only measure one copy of at a time. Unlike those that use entangled, multi-copy measurements, these can be implemented without persistent quantum memory and thus represent a large class of protocols that can be run on current or near-term devices. For mixedness testing, there is a folklore algorithm which uses incoherent measurements and only needs …
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Cryptography and Data Security · Quantum Information and Cryptography
