Simpler Proofs of Quantumness

05/11/2020
by   Zvika Brakerski, et al.
0

A proof of quantumness is a method for provably demonstrating (to a classical verifier) that a quantum device can perform computational tasks that a classical device with comparable resources cannot. Providing a proof of quantumness is the first step towards constructing a useful quantum computer. There are currently three approaches for exhibiting proofs of quantumness: (i) Inverting a classically-hard one-way function (e.g. using Shor's algorithm). This seems technologically out of reach. (ii) Sampling from a classically-hard-to-sample distribution (e.g. BosonSampling). This may be within reach of near-term experiments, but for all such tasks known verification requires exponential time. (iii) Interactive protocols based on cryptographic assumptions. The use of a trapdoor scheme allows for efficient verification, and implementation seems to require much less resources than (i), yet still more than (ii). In this work we propose a significant simplification to approach (iii) by employing the random oracle heuristic. (We note that we do not apply the Fiat-Shamir paradigm.) We give a two-message (challenge-response) proof of quantumness based on any trapdoor claw-free function. In contrast to earlier proposals we do not need an adaptive hard-core bit property. This allows the use of smaller security parameters and more diverse computational assumptions (such as Ring Learning with Errors), significantly reducing the quantum computational effort required for a successful demonstration.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
07/02/2023

Entropy Accumulation under Post-Quantum Cryptographic Assumptions

In device-independent (DI) quantum protocols, the security statements ar...
research
04/01/2021

Classically-Verifiable Quantum Advantage from a Computational Bell Test

We propose and analyze a novel interactive protocol for demonstrating qu...
research
09/15/2021

Beating Classical Impossibility of Position Verification

Chandran et al. (SIAM J. Comput.'14) formally introduced the cryptograph...
research
04/25/2019

Quantum Lazy Sampling and Game-Playing Proofs for Quantum Indifferentiability

Game-playing proofs constitute a powerful framework for classical crypto...
research
03/02/2023

Certified Randomness from Quantum Supremacy

We propose an application for near-term quantum devices: namely, generat...
research
10/28/2020

Tight adaptive reprogramming in the QROM

The random oracle model (ROM) enjoys widespread popularity, mostly becau...
research
07/24/2019

A neural network oracle for quantum nonlocality problems in networks

Characterizing quantum nonlocality in networks is a challenging problem....

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset