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arxiv: 1802.07744 · v1 · submitted 2018-02-21 · 🪐 quant-ph

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Contextuality bounds the efficiency of classical simulation of quantum processes

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classification 🪐 quant-ph
keywords contextualityclassicalquantumpresenceresourcesub-theorybeenestablishing
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Contextuality has been conjectured to be a super-classical resource for quantum computation, analogous to the role of non-locality as a super-classical resource for communication. We show that the presence of contextuality places a lower bound on the amount of classical memory required to simulate any quantum sub-theory, thereby establishing a quantitative connection between contextuality and classical simulability. We apply our result to the qubit stabilizer sub-theory, where the presence of state-independent contextuality has been an obstacle in establishing contextuality as a quantum computational resource. We find that the presence of contextuality in this sub-theory demands that the minimum number of classical bits of memory required to simulate a multi-qubit system must scale quadratically in the number of qubits; notably, this is the same scaling as the Gottesman-Knill algorithm. We contrast this result with the (non-contextual) qudit case, where linear scaling is possible.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

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  1. Magic state cultivation: growing T states as cheap as CNOT gates

    quant-ph 2024-09 unverdicted novelty 7.0

    Magic state cultivation prepares high-fidelity T states with an order of magnitude fewer qubit-rounds than prior distillation methods by gradually growing them within a surface code under depolarizing noise.