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Exponential Separation of Quantum and Classical One-Way Communication Complexity
Author(s) -
Ziv Bar-Yossef,
T. S. Jayram,
Iordanis Kerenidis
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
siam journal on computing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.533
H-Index - 122
eISSN - 1095-7111
pISSN - 0097-5397
ISBN - 1-58113-852-0
DOI - 10.1137/060651835
Subject(s) - communication complexity , mathematics , bounded function , omega , discrete mathematics , combinatorics , quantum information science , randomized algorithm , quantum algorithm , string (physics) , quantum , exponential function , quantum entanglement , physics , quantum mechanics , mathematical analysis , mathematical physics
We give the first exponential separation between quantum and bounded-error randomized one-way communication complexity. Specifically, we define the Hidden Matching Problem HM$_n$: Alice gets as input a string ${\bf x}\in\{0, 1\}^n$, and Bob gets a perfect matching $M$ on the $n$ coordinates. Bob's goal is to output a tuple $\langle i,j,b \rangle$ such that the edge $(i,j)$ belongs to the matching $M$ and $b=x_i\oplus x_j$. We prove that the quantum one-way communication complexity of HM$_n$ is $O(\log n)$, yet any randomized one-way protocol with bounded error must use $\Omega({\sqrt{n}})$ bits of communication. No asymptotic gap for one-way communication was previously known. Our bounds also hold in the model of Simultaneous Messages (SM), and hence we provide the first exponential separation between quantum SM and randomized SM with public coins. For a Boolean decision version of HM$_n$, we show that the quantum one-way communication complexity remains $O(\log n)$ and that the 0-error randomized one-way communication complexity is $\Omega(n)$. We prove that any randomized linear one-way protocol with bounded error for this problem requires $\Omega(\sqrt[3]{n \log n})$ bits of communication.

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