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Clifford Strategies in Interactive Protocols are Classically Simulatable

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Abstract

The complexity class MIP\text{MIP}^\ast consists of all languages decidable by an efficient classical verifier interacting with multiple entanglement-sharing and non-communicating quantum provers. Notably, MIP\text{MIP}^\ast was proved to equal RE\text{RE}, the class of all recursively enumerable languages.We introduce the complexity class Clifford-MIP\text{Clifford-MIP}^\ast, which restricts quantum provers to Clifford operations and classical post-processing of measurement results. We show that strategies in this model can be simulated by classical randomness-sharing provers. In other words, Clifford operations alone do not suffice to generate non-classical correlations in interactive protocols. Consequently, Clifford-MIP=MIP\text{Clifford-MIP}^\ast = \text{MIP}, a vastly smaller complexity class compared to RE\text{RE}.Moreover, we resolve an open question posed by Kalai et al. (STOC 2023), by showing that quantum advantage in any single-round non-local game requires at least two provers operating outside the Clifford-MIP\text{Clifford-MIP}^\ast computational model. This rules out a proposed approach for significantly improving the efficiency of tests for quantum advantage that are based on compiling non-local games into single-prover interactive protocols.

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