On the uselessness of quantum queries (Q433109): Difference between revisions
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Property / author: David A. Meyer / rank | |||
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The paper treats the classical and quantum query complexity of oracles. These provide the values of an unknown function in response to queries and the task is to determine a property of the function. In the introduction, some easy-to-follow examples of useful and useless queries are presented. Afterwards, classical ``uselessness'' of \(k\) queries to the oracle is strictly defined: Knowledge of any \(k\) function values does not change the probability of the function to belong to a particular property class. The quantum generalization is straightforward: \(k\) quantum queries are useless if afterwards no measurement (described by a generalized POVM) changes the probability of the function to have the sought-after property. For example, in Deutsch's problem, a single classical query is useless whereas a single quantum query may be useful. The main result of the paper is that when \(2k\) classical queries are useless, also \(k\) quantum queries are, which gives a lower bound to useful quantum queries as \(k+1\). The paper provides three examples (a parity problem, a generalization of Deutsch's problem, and a polynomial interpolation problem) and of course the proof of the main theorem. The authors suggest to use their theorem for obtaining a lower bound of quantum query complexities. Although a bit technical, the paper is easy to read and recommendable for researchers interested in quantum query complexity with background in quantum algorithms. | |||
Property / review text: The paper treats the classical and quantum query complexity of oracles. These provide the values of an unknown function in response to queries and the task is to determine a property of the function. In the introduction, some easy-to-follow examples of useful and useless queries are presented. Afterwards, classical ``uselessness'' of \(k\) queries to the oracle is strictly defined: Knowledge of any \(k\) function values does not change the probability of the function to belong to a particular property class. The quantum generalization is straightforward: \(k\) quantum queries are useless if afterwards no measurement (described by a generalized POVM) changes the probability of the function to have the sought-after property. For example, in Deutsch's problem, a single classical query is useless whereas a single quantum query may be useful. The main result of the paper is that when \(2k\) classical queries are useless, also \(k\) quantum queries are, which gives a lower bound to useful quantum queries as \(k+1\). The paper provides three examples (a parity problem, a generalization of Deutsch's problem, and a polynomial interpolation problem) and of course the proof of the main theorem. The authors suggest to use their theorem for obtaining a lower bound of quantum query complexities. Although a bit technical, the paper is easy to read and recommendable for researchers interested in quantum query complexity with background in quantum algorithms. / rank | |||
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Property / reviewed by: Gernot Schaller / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 68Q12 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 68Q32 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 68Q25 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 81P68 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 81P15 / rank | |||
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Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6055702 / rank | |||
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quantum algorithms | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: quantum algorithms / rank | |||
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oracle query complexity | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: oracle query complexity / rank | |||
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computational complexity | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: computational complexity / rank | |||
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Revision as of 23:21, 29 June 2023
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
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English | On the uselessness of quantum queries |
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Statements
On the uselessness of quantum queries (English)
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13 July 2012
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The paper treats the classical and quantum query complexity of oracles. These provide the values of an unknown function in response to queries and the task is to determine a property of the function. In the introduction, some easy-to-follow examples of useful and useless queries are presented. Afterwards, classical ``uselessness'' of \(k\) queries to the oracle is strictly defined: Knowledge of any \(k\) function values does not change the probability of the function to belong to a particular property class. The quantum generalization is straightforward: \(k\) quantum queries are useless if afterwards no measurement (described by a generalized POVM) changes the probability of the function to have the sought-after property. For example, in Deutsch's problem, a single classical query is useless whereas a single quantum query may be useful. The main result of the paper is that when \(2k\) classical queries are useless, also \(k\) quantum queries are, which gives a lower bound to useful quantum queries as \(k+1\). The paper provides three examples (a parity problem, a generalization of Deutsch's problem, and a polynomial interpolation problem) and of course the proof of the main theorem. The authors suggest to use their theorem for obtaining a lower bound of quantum query complexities. Although a bit technical, the paper is easy to read and recommendable for researchers interested in quantum query complexity with background in quantum algorithms.
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quantum algorithms
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oracle query complexity
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computational complexity
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