Low-Stabilizer-Complexity Quantum States Are Not Pseudorandom

We show that quantum states with "low stabilizer complexity" can be efficiently distinguished from Haar-random. Specifically, given an -qubit pure state , we give an efficient algorithm that distinguishes whether is (i) Haar-random or (ii) a state with stabilizer fidelity at least (i.e., has fidelity at least with some stabilizer state), promised that one of these is the case. With black-box access to , our algorithm uses copies of and time to succeed with probability at least , and, with access to a state preparation unitary for (and its inverse), queries and time suffice. As a corollary, we prove that -gates are necessary for any Clifford+ circuit to prepare computationally pseudorandom quantum states, a first-of-its-kind lower bound.
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