What can be computed without communications?

Author:

Arfaoui Heger1,Fraigniaud Pierre1

Affiliation:

1. CNRS and University Paris Diderot

Abstract

The main objective of this paper is to provide illustrative examples of distributed computing problems for which it is possible to design tight lower bounds for quantum algorithms without having to manipulate concepts from quantum mechanics, at all. As a case study, we address the following class of 2-player problems. Alice (resp., Bob) receives a boolean x (resp., y) as input, and must return a boolean a (resp., b) as output. A game between Alice and Bob is defined by a pair (?, f) of boolean functions. The objective of Alice and Bob playing game (?, f) is, for every pair (x, y) of inputs, to output values a and b, respectively, satisfying ?(a, b) = f(x, y), in absence of any communication between the two players, but in presence of shared resources. The ability of the two players to solve the game then depends on the type of resources they share. It is known that, for the so-called CHSH game, i.e., for the game a ? b = x ? y, the ability for the players to use entangled quantum bits (qubits) helps. We show that, apart from the CHSH game, quantum correlations do not help, in the sense that, for every game not equivalent to the CHSH game, there exists a classical protocol (using shared randomness) whose probability of success is at least as large as the one of any protocol using quantum resources. This result holds for both worst case and average case analysis. It is achieved by considering a model stronger than quantum correlations, the non-signaling model, which subsumes quantum mechanics, but is far easier to handle.

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Cited by 5 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. On the Power of Quantum Distributed Proofs;Proceedings of the 43rd ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing;2024-06-17

2. No Distributed Quantum Advantage for Approximate Graph Coloring;Proceedings of the 56th Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing;2024-06-10

3. Randomized Local Network Computing: Derandomization Beyond Locally Checkable Labelings;ACM Transactions on Parallel Computing;2021-12-31

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