Repository logo
 

Summoning, No-Signaling and Relativistic Bit Commitments

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Abstract

Summoning is a task between two parties, Alice and Bob, with distributed networks of agents in space-time. Bob gives Alice a random quantum state, known to him but not her, at some point. She is required to return the state at some later point, belonging to a subset defined by communications received from Bob at other points. Many results about summoning, including the impossibility of unrestricted summoning tasks and the necessary conditions for specific types of summoning tasks to be possible, follow directly from the quantum no-cloning theorem and the relativistic no-superluminal-signalling principle. The impossibility of cloning devices can be derived from the impossibility of superluminal signalling and the projection postulate, together with assumptions about the devices' location-independent functioning. In this qualified sense, known summoning results follow from the causal structure of space-time and the properties of quantum measurements. Bounds on the fidelity of approximate cloning can be similarly derived. Bit commitment protocols and other cryptographic protocols based on the no-summoning theorem can thus be proven secure against some classes of post-quantum but non-signalling adversaries.

Description

Keywords

bit commitment, no-cloning, no-signalling, quantum cryptography, relativistic quantum information, summoning

Journal Title

Entropy

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1099-4300
1099-4300

Volume Title

21

Publisher

MDPI AG
Sponsorship
EPSRC (via University of York) (EP/M013472/1)
This work was partially supported by UK Quantum Communications Hub grant no. EP/M013472/1 and by Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. Research at Perimeter Institute is supported by the Government of Canada through Industry Canada and by the Province of Ontario through the Ministry of Research and Innovation.