Paper 2024/1500

Hard Quantum Extrapolations in Quantum Cryptography

Luowen Qian, NTT Research, Inc.
Justin Raizes, Carnegie Mellon University
Mark Zhandry, NTT Research, Inc.
Abstract

Although one-way functions are well-established as the minimal primitive for classical cryptography, a minimal primitive for quantum cryptography is still unclear. Universal extrapolation, first considered by Impagliazzo and Levin (1990), is hard if and only if one-way functions exist. Towards better understanding minimal assumptions for quantum cryptography, we study the quantum analogues of the universal extrapolation task. Specifically, we put forth the classical$\rightarrow$quantum extrapolation task, where we ask to extrapolate the rest of a bipartite pure state given the first register measured in the computational basis. We then use it as a key component to establish new connections in quantum cryptography: (a) quantum commitments exist if classical$\rightarrow$quantum extrapolation is hard; and (b) classical$\rightarrow$quantum extrapolation is hard if any of the following cryptographic primitives exists: quantum public-key cryptography (such as quantum money and signatures) with a classical public key or 2-message quantum key distribution protocols. For future work, we further generalize the extrapolation task and propose a fully quantum analogue. We show that it is hard if quantum commitments exist, and it is easy for quantum polynomial space.

Metadata
Available format(s)
PDF
Category
Foundations
Publication info
A minor revision of an IACR publication in EUROCRYPT 2025
Keywords
mutually unbiased basescliffordunitary designs
Contact author(s)
luowen @ qcry pt
jraizes @ cmu edu
mzhandry @ gmail com
History
2025-04-11: last of 2 revisions
2024-09-24: received
See all versions
Short URL
https://ia.cr/2024/1500
License
Creative Commons Attribution
CC BY

BibTeX

@misc{cryptoeprint:2024/1500,
      author = {Luowen Qian and Justin Raizes and Mark Zhandry},
      title = {Hard Quantum Extrapolations in Quantum Cryptography},
      howpublished = {Cryptology {ePrint} Archive, Paper 2024/1500},
      year = {2024},
      url = {https://eprint.iacr.org/2024/1500}
}
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