Efficiently stable presentations from error-correcting codes

Abstract

We introduce a notion of efficient stability for finite presentations of groups. Informally, a finite presentation using generators S and relations R is stable if any map from S to unitaries that approximately satisfies the relations (in the tracial norm) is close to the restriction of a representation of G to the subset S. This notion and variants thereof have been extensively studied in recent years, in part motivated by connections to property testing in computer science. The novelty in our work is the focus on efficiency, which, informally, places an onus on small presentations -- in the sense of encoding length. The goal in this setup is to achieve non-trivial tradeoffs between the presentation length and its modulus of stability. With this goal in mind we analyze various natural examples of presentations. We provide a general method for constructing presentations of Z2k from linear error-correcting codes. We observe that the resulting presentation has a weak form of stability exactly when the code is testable. This raises the question of whether testable codes give rise to genuinely stable presentations using this method. While we cannot show that this is the case in general, we leverage recent results in the study of non-local games in quantum information theory (Ji et al., Discrete Analysis 2021) to show that a specific instantiation of our construction, based on the Reed-Muller family of codes, leads to a stable presentation of Z2k of size polylog(k) only. As an application, we combine this result with recent work of de la Salle (arXiv:2204.07084) to re-derive the quantum low-degree test of Natarajan and Vidick (IEEE FOCS'18), which is a key building block in the recent refutation of Connes' Embedding Problem via complexity theory (Ji et al., arXiv:2001.04383).

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