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Hiding in Gaussian Boson Sampling
Laura Shou - University of Maryland
Friday, September 19, 2025, 12:00-1:00 pm
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Abstract

Gaussian boson sampling (GBS) is a promising protocol for demonstrating quantum computational advantage. One of the key steps for proving classical hardness of GBS is the so-called ``hiding conjecture'', which asserts that one can ``hide'' a complex Gaussian matrix as a submatrix of the outer product of Haar unitary submatrices in total variation distance. In this talk, we will discuss the proof of the hiding conjecture for input states with the maximal number of squeezed states, which is a setup that has recently been realized experimentally [Madsen et al., Nature 606, 75 (2022)]. In this setting, the hiding conjecture states that a o(\sqrt{M})xo(\sqrt{M}) submatrix of an MxM circular orthogonal ensemble (COE) random matrix can be well-approximated by a complex Gaussian matrix in total variation distance as M\to\infty. This provides the first rigorous proof of the hiding property for GBS in the experimentally relevant regime, and puts the argument for hardness of classically simulating GBS with a maximal number of squeezed states on a comparable level to that of the conventional boson sampling of [Aaronson and Arkhipov, Theory Comput. 9, 143 (2013)].

Pizza and drinks will be served after the seminar in ATL 2117.

This talk is organized by Andrea F. Svejda