On polynomially many queries to NP or QMA oracles

S. Gharibian, D. Rudolph, in: 13th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science (ITCS 2022), 2022, pp. 1–27.

Conference Paper | English
Author
Gharibian, SevagLibreCat ; Rudolph, Dorian
Abstract
We study the complexity of problems solvable in deterministic polynomial time with access to an NP or Quantum Merlin-Arthur (QMA)-oracle, such as $P^{NP}$ and $P^{QMA}$, respectively. The former allows one to classify problems more finely than the Polynomial-Time Hierarchy (PH), whereas the latter characterizes physically motivated problems such as Approximate Simulation (APX-SIM) [Ambainis, CCC 2014]. In this area, a central role has been played by the classes $P^{NP[\log]}$ and $P^{QMA[\log]}$, defined identically to $P^{NP}$ and $P^{QMA}$, except that only logarithmically many oracle queries are allowed. Here, [Gottlob, FOCS 1993] showed that if the adaptive queries made by a $P^{NP}$ machine have a "query graph" which is a tree, then this computation can be simulated in $P^{NP[\log]}$. In this work, we first show that for any verification class $C\in\{NP,MA,QCMA,QMA,QMA(2),NEXP,QMA_{\exp}\}$, any $P^C$ machine with a query graph of "separator number" $s$ can be simulated using deterministic time $\exp(s\log n)$ and $s\log n$ queries to a $C$-oracle. When $s\in O(1)$ (which includes the case of $O(1)$-treewidth, and thus also of trees), this gives an upper bound of $P^{C[\log]}$, and when $s\in O(\log^k(n))$, this yields bound $QP^{C[\log^{k+1}]}$ (QP meaning quasi-polynomial time). We next show how to combine Gottlob's "admissible-weighting function" framework with the "flag-qubit" framework of [Watson, Bausch, Gharibian, 2020], obtaining a unified approach for embedding $P^C$ computations directly into APX-SIM instances in a black-box fashion. Finally, we formalize a simple no-go statement about polynomials (c.f. [Krentel, STOC 1986]): Given a multi-linear polynomial $p$ specified via an arithmetic circuit, if one can "weakly compress" $p$ so that its optimal value requires $m$ bits to represent, then $P^{NP}$ can be decided with only $m$ queries to an NP-oracle.
Publishing Year
Proceedings Title
13th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science (ITCS 2022)
Volume
215
Issue
75
Page
1-27
LibreCat-ID

Cite this

Gharibian S, Rudolph D. On polynomially many queries to NP or QMA oracles. In: 13th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science (ITCS 2022). Vol 215. ; 2022:1-27. doi:10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2022.75
Gharibian, S., & Rudolph, D. (2022). On polynomially many queries to NP or QMA oracles. 13th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science (ITCS 2022), 215(75), 1–27. https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2022.75
@inproceedings{Gharibian_Rudolph_2022, title={On polynomially many queries to NP or QMA oracles}, volume={215}, DOI={10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2022.75}, number={75}, booktitle={13th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science (ITCS 2022)}, author={Gharibian, Sevag and Rudolph, Dorian}, year={2022}, pages={1–27} }
Gharibian, Sevag, and Dorian Rudolph. “On Polynomially Many Queries to NP or QMA Oracles.” In 13th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science (ITCS 2022), 215:1–27, 2022. https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2022.75.
S. Gharibian and D. Rudolph, “On polynomially many queries to NP or QMA oracles,” in 13th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science (ITCS 2022), 2022, vol. 215, no. 75, pp. 1–27, doi: 10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2022.75.
Gharibian, Sevag, and Dorian Rudolph. “On Polynomially Many Queries to NP or QMA Oracles.” 13th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science (ITCS 2022), vol. 215, no. 75, 2022, pp. 1–27, doi:10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2022.75.
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