On the Computational Hardness of Quantum One-Wayness
Bruno Cavalar, Eli Goldin, Matthew Gray, Peter Hall, Yanyi Liu,, Angelos Pelecanos

TL;DR
This paper explores the relationship between quantum and classical cryptographic primitives, establishing new links between pseudorandom states and one-way state generators, and analyzing their computational hardness and implications.
Contribution
It demonstrates that certain pseudorandom quantum states can be used to construct one-way state generators, establishing a connection previously unknown in full generality.
Findings
Pseudorandom states with minimal qubits can generate one-way state generators.
Any one-way state generator can be broken with a PP oracle.
Unconditional existence of t(n)-copy one-way state generators for t(n)=o(n/ log n).
Abstract
There is a large body of work studying what forms of computational hardness are needed to realize classical cryptography. In particular, one-way functions and pseudorandom generators can be built from each other, and thus require equivalent computational assumptions to be realized. Furthermore, the existence of either of these primitives implies that , which gives a lower bound on the necessary hardness. One can also define versions of each of these primitives with quantum output: respectively one-way state generators and pseudorandom state generators. Unlike in the classical setting, it is not known whether either primitive can be built from the other. Although it has been shown that pseudorandom state generators for certain parameter regimes can be used to build one-way state generators, the implication has not been previously known in full generality.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum-Dot Cellular Automata · Quantum Information and Cryptography
