
arXiv: 2311.16057
Motivated by limitations on the depth of near-term quantum devices, we study the depth-computation trade-off in the query model, where the depth corresponds to the number of adaptive query rounds and the computation per layer corresponds to the number of parallel queries per round. We achieve the strongest known separation between quantum algorithms with $r$ versus $r-1$ rounds of adaptivity. We do so by using the $k$-fold Forrelation problem introduced by Aaronson and Ambainis (SICOMP'18). For $k=2r$, this problem can be solved using an $r$ round quantum algorithm with only one query per round, yet we show that any $r-1$ round quantum algorithm needs an exponential (in the number of qubits) number of parallel queries per round. Our results are proven following the Fourier analytic machinery developed in recent works on quantum-classical separations. The key new component in our result are bounds on the Fourier weights of quantum query algorithms with bounded number of rounds of adaptivity. These may be of independent interest as they distinguish the polynomials that arise from such algorithms from arbitrary bounded polynomials of the same degree.
35 pages, 9 figures
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Quantum Physics, Fourier Analysis of Boolean Functions, Quantum Query Algorithms, FOS: Physical sciences, Query Adaptivity, Computational Complexity (cs.CC), Pure Mathematics, Quantum Advantages, Mathematical Sciences, 004, Computer Science - Computational Complexity, Information and Computing Sciences, Physical Sciences, Computer Science - Data Structures and Algorithms, Forrelation, Data Structures and Algorithms (cs.DS), Quantum Physics (quant-ph)
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Quantum Physics, Fourier Analysis of Boolean Functions, Quantum Query Algorithms, FOS: Physical sciences, Query Adaptivity, Computational Complexity (cs.CC), Pure Mathematics, Quantum Advantages, Mathematical Sciences, 004, Computer Science - Computational Complexity, Information and Computing Sciences, Physical Sciences, Computer Science - Data Structures and Algorithms, Forrelation, Data Structures and Algorithms (cs.DS), Quantum Physics (quant-ph)
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