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It has been known for almost three decades that many $mathrm{NP}$-hard optimization problems can be solved in polynomial time when restricted to structures of constant treewidth. In this work we provide the first extension of such results to the quantum setting. We show that given a quantum circuit $C$ with $n$ uninitialized inputs, $mathit{poly}(n)$ gates, and treewidth $t$, one can compute in time $(frac{n}{delta})^{exp(O(t))}$ a classical assignment $yin {0,1}^n$ that maximizes the acceptance probability of $C$ up to a $delta$ additive factor. In particular, our algorithm runs in polynomial time if $t$ is constant and $1/poly(n) < delta < 1$. For unrestricted values of $t$, this problem is known to be complete for the complexity class $mathrm{QCMA}$, a quantum generalization of MA. In contrast, we show that the same problem is $mathrm{NP}$-complete if $t=O(log n)$ even when $delta$ is constant. On the other hand, we show that given a $n$-input quantum circuit $C$ of treewidth $t=O(log n)$, and a constant $delta<1/2$, it is $mathrm{QMA}$-complete to determine whether there exists a quantum state $mid!varphirangle in (mathbb{C}^d)^{otimes n}$ such that the acceptance probability of $Cmid!varphirangle$ is greater than $1-delta$, or whether for every such state $mid!varphirangle$, the acceptance probability of $Cmid!varphirangle$ is less than $delta$. As a consequence, under the widely believed assumption that $mathrm{QMA} eq mathrm{NP}$, we have that quantum witnesses are strictly more powerful than classical witnesses with respect to Merlin-Arthur protocols in which the verifier is a quantum circuit of logarithmic treewidth.
We show that any quantum circuit of treewidth $t$, built from $r$-qubit gates, requires at least $Omega(frac{n^{2}}{2^{O(rcdot t)}cdot log^4 n})$ gates to compute the element distinctness function. Our result generalizes a near-quadratic lower bound
For Boolean satisfiability problems, the structure of the solution space is characterized by the solution graph, where the vertices are the solutions, and two solutions are connected iff they differ in exactly one variable. In 2006, Gopalan et al. st
We provide a graphical treatment of SAT and #SAT on equal footing. Instances of #SAT can be represented as tensor networks in a standard way. These tensor networks are interpreted by diagrams of the ZH-calculus: a system to reason about tensors over
It is well-known that deciding equivalence of logic circuits is a coNP-complete problem. As a corollary, the problem of deciding weak equivalence of reversible circuits, i.e. ignoring the ancilla bits, is also coNP-complete. The complexity of decidin
We present a number of results related to quantum algorithms with small error probability and quantum algorithms that are zero-error. First, we give a tight analysis of the trade-offs between the number of queries of quantum search algorithms, their