Updated on 2025/10/22

写真a

 
HASEGAWA Atsuya
 
Organization
Graduate School of Mathematics Division of Mathematics Designated Assistant Professor
Title
Designated Assistant Professor
 

Papers 1

  1. On the Power of Quantum Distributed Proofs

    Hasegawa A., Kundu S., Nishimura H.

    Proceedings of the Annual ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing     page: 220 - 230   2024.6

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    Publisher:Proceedings of the Annual ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing  

    Quantum nondeterministic distributed computing was recently introduced as dQMA (distributed quantum Merlin-Arthur) protocols by Fraigniaud, Le Gall, Nishimura and Paz (ITCS 2021). In dQMA protocols, with the help of quantum proofs and local communication, nodes on a network verify some global property of the network. Fraigniaud et al. showed that, when the network size is small, there exists an exponential separation in proof size between distributed classical and quantum verification protocols, for the equality problem, where the verifiers check if all the data owned by a subset of them are identical. In this paper, we further investigate and characterize the power of the dQMA protocols for various decision problems.First, we give a more efficient dQMA protocol for the equality problem with a simpler analysis. This is done by adding a symmetrization step on each node and exploiting properties of the permutation test, which is a generalization of the SWAP test. We also show a quantum advantage for the equality problem on path networks still persists even when the network size is large, by considering "relay points"between extreme nodes.Second, we show that even in a general network, there exist efficient dQMA protocols for the ranking verification problem, the Hamming distance problem, and more problems that derive from efficient quantum one-way communication protocols. Third, in a line network, we construct an efficient dQMA protocol for any problem that has an efficient two-party QMA communication protocol.Finally, we obtain the first lower bounds on the proof and communication cost of dQMA protocols. To prove a lower bound on the equality problem, we show any dQMA protocol with an entangled proof between nodes can be simulated with a dQMA protocol with a separable proof between nodes by using a QMA communication-complete problem introduced by Raz and Shpilka (CCC 2004).

    DOI: 10.1145/3662158.3662788

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