Unconditional and exponentially large violation of classicality
Marcello Benedetti, Gabriel Marin-Sanchez, Jordi Weggemans, Matthias Rosenkranz, Harry Buhrman

TL;DR
This paper introduces a scalable quantum test for non-classicality that demonstrates an exponentially large violation of classical predictions, validated through experiments on a 55-qubit quantum computer.
Contribution
It presents a new game based on complement sampling that achieves the largest quantum-classical separation without relying on complexity assumptions.
Findings
Experimental validation on Quantinuum H2 with thousands of circuits.
Observation of exponential violation of classicality.
Confirmation of quantum hardware's quantum behavior.
Abstract
Testing the predictions of quantum mechanics has been one of the main experimental endeavors for decades. Recent advancements in technology led to a number of demonstrations which test non-classicality via specific computational tasks. Limitations of these experiments include dependence on complexity theory assumptions, susceptibility to hardware noise and inefficient verification, raising questions about their scalability. We propose to test non-classicality using a game based on complement sampling, an efficiently verifiable problem that achieves the largest possible separation between quantum and classical computation when both input and output represent samples from probability distributions. When restricting the input to instances inspired by the Bernstein-Vazirani problem, our game admits an exponentially large violation of classicality without relying on computational hardness…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Formal Methods in Verification · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
