{"title":"Tight Bounds on the Spooky Pebble Game: Recycling Qubits with Measurements","authors":"Niels Kornerup, Jonathan Sadun, David Soloveichik","doi":"10.22331/q-2025-02-18-1636","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Pebble games are popular models for analyzing time-space trade-offs. In particular, reversible pebble game strategies are frequently applied in quantum algorithms like Grover's search to efficiently simulate classical computation on inputs in superposition, as unitary operations are fundamentally reversible. However, the reversible pebble game cannot harness the additional computational power granted by intermediate measurements, which are irreversible. The spooky pebble game, which models interleaved Hadamard basis measurements and adaptive phase corrections, reduces the number of qubits beyond what purely reversible approaches can achieve. While the spooky pebble game does not reduce the total space (bits plus qubits) complexity of the simulation, it reduces the amount of space that must be stored in qubits. We prove asymptotically tight trade-offs for the spooky pebble game on a line with any pebble bound. This in turn gives a tight time-qubit tradeoff for simulating arbitrary classical sequential computation when using the spooky pebble game. For example, for all $\\epsilon \\in (0,1]$, any classical computation requiring time $T$ and space $S$ can be implemented on a quantum computer using only $O(T/ \\epsilon)$ gates and $O(T^{\\epsilon}S^{1-\\epsilon})$ qubits. This improves on the best known bound for the reversible pebble game with that number of qubits, which uses $O(2^{1/\\epsilon} T)$ gates. For smaller space bounds, we show that the spooky pebble game can simulate arbitrary computation with $O(T^{1+\\epsilon} S^{-\\epsilon}/\\epsilon)$ gates and $O(S / \\epsilon)$ qubits whereas any simulation via the reversible pebble game requires $\\Omega(S \\cdot (1+\\log(T/S)))$ qubits.<br/>\n<br/> We also consider the spooky pebble game on more general directed acyclic graphs (DAGs), capturing fine-grained data dependency in computation. We show that for an arbitrary DAG even approximating the number of required pebbles in the spooky pebble game is PSPACE-hard. Despite this, we are able to construct a time-efficient strategy for pebbling binary trees that uses the minimum number of pebbles.","PeriodicalId":20807,"journal":{"name":"Quantum","volume":"11 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":5.1000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Quantum","FirstCategoryId":"101","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.22331/q-2025-02-18-1636","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"物理与天体物理","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"PHYSICS, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Pebble games are popular models for analyzing time-space trade-offs. In particular, reversible pebble game strategies are frequently applied in quantum algorithms like Grover's search to efficiently simulate classical computation on inputs in superposition, as unitary operations are fundamentally reversible. However, the reversible pebble game cannot harness the additional computational power granted by intermediate measurements, which are irreversible. The spooky pebble game, which models interleaved Hadamard basis measurements and adaptive phase corrections, reduces the number of qubits beyond what purely reversible approaches can achieve. While the spooky pebble game does not reduce the total space (bits plus qubits) complexity of the simulation, it reduces the amount of space that must be stored in qubits. We prove asymptotically tight trade-offs for the spooky pebble game on a line with any pebble bound. This in turn gives a tight time-qubit tradeoff for simulating arbitrary classical sequential computation when using the spooky pebble game. For example, for all $\epsilon \in (0,1]$, any classical computation requiring time $T$ and space $S$ can be implemented on a quantum computer using only $O(T/ \epsilon)$ gates and $O(T^{\epsilon}S^{1-\epsilon})$ qubits. This improves on the best known bound for the reversible pebble game with that number of qubits, which uses $O(2^{1/\epsilon} T)$ gates. For smaller space bounds, we show that the spooky pebble game can simulate arbitrary computation with $O(T^{1+\epsilon} S^{-\epsilon}/\epsilon)$ gates and $O(S / \epsilon)$ qubits whereas any simulation via the reversible pebble game requires $\Omega(S \cdot (1+\log(T/S)))$ qubits.
We also consider the spooky pebble game on more general directed acyclic graphs (DAGs), capturing fine-grained data dependency in computation. We show that for an arbitrary DAG even approximating the number of required pebbles in the spooky pebble game is PSPACE-hard. Despite this, we are able to construct a time-efficient strategy for pebbling binary trees that uses the minimum number of pebbles.
QuantumPhysics and Astronomy-Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
9.20
自引率
10.90%
发文量
241
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍:
Quantum is an open-access peer-reviewed journal for quantum science and related fields. Quantum is non-profit and community-run: an effort by researchers and for researchers to make science more open and publishing more transparent and efficient.