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Near-Term Pseudorandom and Pseudoresource Quantum States

Abstract

A pseudorandom quantum state (PRS) is an ensemble of quantum states indistinguishable from Haar-random states to observers with efficient quantum computers. It allows one to substitute the costly Haar-random state with efficiently preparable PRS as a resource for cryptographic protocols, while also finding applications in quantum learning theory, black hole physics, many-body thermalization, quantum foundations, and quantum chaos. All existing constructions of PRS equate the notion of efficiency to quantum computers which runtime is bounded by a polynomial in its input size. In this work, we relax the notion of efficiency for PRS with respect to observers with near-term quantum computers implementing algorithms with runtime that scales slower than polynomial-time. We introduce the T\mathbf{T}-PRS which is indistinguishable to quantum algorithms with runtime T(n)\mathbf{T}(n) that grows slower than polynomials in the input size nn. We give a set of reasonable conditions that a T\mathbf{T}-PRS must satisfy and give two constructions by using quantum-secure pseudorandom functions and pseudorandom functions. For T(n)\mathbf{T}(n) being linearithmic, linear, polylogarithmic, and logarithmic function, we characterize the amount of quantum resources a T\mathbf{T}-PRS must possess, particularly on its coherence, entanglement, and magic. Our quantum resource characterization applies generally to any two state ensembles that are indistinguishable to observers with computational power T(n)\mathbf{T}(n), giving a general necessary condition of whether a low-resource ensemble can mimic a high-resource ensemble, forming a T\mathbf{T}-pseudoresource pair. We demonstate how the necessary amount of resource decreases as the observer's computational power is more restricted, giving a T\mathbf{T}-pseudoresource pair with larger resource gap for more computationally limited observers.

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@article{tanggara2025_2504.17650,
  title={ Near-Term Pseudorandom and Pseudoresource Quantum States },
  author={ Andrew Tanggara and Mile Gu and Kishor Bharti },
  journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.17650},
  year={ 2025 }
}
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