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On the exact quantum query complexity of $\text{MOD}_m^n$ and $\text{EXACT}_{k,l}^n$

Penghui Yao, Zekun Ye

TL;DR

An optimal quantum algorithm is presented for computing the exact quantum query complexity of a broad class of symmetric functions that map $\{0,1\}^n$ to a finite set $X$ is less than $n".

Abstract

The query model has generated considerable interest in both classical and quantum computing communities. Typically, quantum advantages are demonstrated by showcasing a quantum algorithm with a better query complexity compared to its classical counterpart. Exact quantum query algorithms play a pivotal role in developing quantum algorithms. For example, the Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm demonstrated exponential quantum advantages over classical deterministic algorithms. As an important complexity measure, exact quantum query complexity describes the minimum number of queries required to solve a specific problem exactly using a quantum algorithm. In this paper, we consider the exact quantum query complexity of the following two $n$-bit symmetric functions $\text{MOD}_m^n:\{0,1\}^n \rightarrow \{0,...,m-1\}$ and $\text{EXACT}_{k,l}^n:\{0,1\}^n \rightarrow \{0,1\}$, which are defined as $\text{MOD}_m^n(x) = |x| \bmod m$ and $ \text{EXACT}_{k,l}^n(x) = 1$ iff $|x| \in \{k,l\}$, where $|x|$ is the number of $1$'s in $x$. Our results are as follows: i) We present an optimal quantum algorithm for computing $\text{MOD}_m^n$, achieving a query complexity of $\lceil n(1-\frac{1}{m}) \rceil$ for $1 < m \le n$. This settles a conjecture proposed by Cornelissen, Mande, Ozols and de Wolf (2021). Based on this algorithm, we show the exact quantum query complexity of a broad class of symmetric functions that map $\{0,1\}^n$ to a finite set $X$ is less than $n$. ii) When $l-k \ge 2$, we give an optimal exact quantum query algorithm to compute $\text{EXACT}_{k,l}^n$ for the case $k=0$ or $k=1,l=n-1$. This resolves the conjecture proposed by Ambainis, Iraids and Nagaj (2017) partially.

On the exact quantum query complexity of $\text{MOD}_m^n$ and $\text{EXACT}_{k,l}^n$

TL;DR

An optimal quantum algorithm is presented for computing the exact quantum query complexity of a broad class of symmetric functions that map to a finite set is less than $n".

Abstract

The query model has generated considerable interest in both classical and quantum computing communities. Typically, quantum advantages are demonstrated by showcasing a quantum algorithm with a better query complexity compared to its classical counterpart. Exact quantum query algorithms play a pivotal role in developing quantum algorithms. For example, the Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm demonstrated exponential quantum advantages over classical deterministic algorithms. As an important complexity measure, exact quantum query complexity describes the minimum number of queries required to solve a specific problem exactly using a quantum algorithm. In this paper, we consider the exact quantum query complexity of the following two -bit symmetric functions and , which are defined as and iff , where is the number of 's in . Our results are as follows: i) We present an optimal quantum algorithm for computing , achieving a query complexity of for . This settles a conjecture proposed by Cornelissen, Mande, Ozols and de Wolf (2021). Based on this algorithm, we show the exact quantum query complexity of a broad class of symmetric functions that map to a finite set is less than . ii) When , we give an optimal exact quantum query algorithm to compute for the case or . This resolves the conjecture proposed by Ambainis, Iraids and Nagaj (2017) partially.
Paper Structure (8 sections, 5 theorems, 16 equations, 1 table, 3 algorithms)

This paper contains 8 sections, 5 theorems, 16 equations, 1 table, 3 algorithms.

Key Result

Theorem 1

For $1 < m \le n$, there exists an exact quantum query algorithm to compute $\textsc{MOD}_m^n$ using $\lceil n(1-\frac{1}{m}) \rceil$ queries.

Theorems & Definitions (19)

  • Conjecture 1: CMO+21
  • Conjecture 2: AIN17
  • Definition 1: POVM NC15
  • Definition 2: Quantum query algorithms
  • Remark 1
  • Definition 3: Exact quantum algorithms
  • Definition 4: Exact quantum query complexity
  • Definition 5: Univariate version of symmetric functions
  • Definition 6: Majority index
  • Theorem 1
  • ...and 9 more