Quantum advantage in a unified scenario and secure detection of resources
Saronath Halder, Alexander Streltsov

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a quantum advantage in a unified communication scenario where a qubit outperforms a classical bit in identifying a random variable, with implications for secure detection of quantum resources.
Contribution
It introduces a unified scenario for observing quantum advantage in communication tasks, showing qubits outperform classical bits even with shared randomness, and links this to secure quantumness detection.
Findings
Qubit communication achieves higher success probability than classical bits.
Quantum advantage persists even with shared randomness.
The task is experimentally feasible and useful for secure quantumness detection.
Abstract
Quantum resources may provide advantage over their classical counterparts. We say this as quantum advantage. Here we consider a single communication task to study different approaches of observing quantum advantage. We say this setting as a unified scenario. In our task, there are three parties - the Manager, Alice, and Bob. The Manager sends a value of a random variable to Alice and at the same time Bob receives some partial information regarding that value. Initially, neither Alice nor Bob knows the input of the other, received from the Manager. The goal of the task is achieved if and only if the value of the random variable, sent to Alice by the Manager, is identified by Bob with success probability greater than half all the time. Here non-zero error probability is allowed. However, to help Bob, Alice sends a limited amount of classical or quantum information to him (cbit or qubit).…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
