The Quantum Supremacy Tsirelson Inequality

Abstract

A leading proposal for verifying near-term quantum supremacy experiments on noisy random quantum circuits is linear cross-entropy benchmarking. For a quantum circuit C on n qubits and a sample z ∈ \0,1\n, the benchmark involves computing | z|C|0n |2, i.e. the probability of measuring z from the output distribution of C on the all zeros input. Under a strong conjecture about the classical hardness of estimating output probabilities of quantum circuits, no polynomial-time classical algorithm given C can output a string z such that | z|C|0n|2 is substantially larger than 12n (Aaronson and Gunn, 2019). On the other hand, for a random quantum circuit C, sampling z from the output distribution of C achieves | z|C|0n|2 ≈ 22n on average (Arute et al., 2019). In analogy with the Tsirelson inequality from quantum nonlocal correlations, we ask: can a polynomial-time quantum algorithm do substantially better than 22n? We study this question in the query (or black box) model, where the quantum algorithm is given oracle access to C. We show that, for any 1poly(n), outputting a sample z such that | z|C|0n|2 2 + 2n on average requires at least (2n/4poly(n)) queries to C, but not more than O(2n/3) queries to C, if C is either a Haar-random n-qubit unitary, or a canonical state preparation oracle for a Haar-random n-qubit state. We also show that when C samples from the Fourier distribution of a random Boolean function, the naive algorithm that samples from C is the optimal 1-query algorithm for maximizing | z|C|0n|2 on average.

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