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QRAM: A Survey and Critique (2305.10310v1)

Published 17 May 2023 in quant-ph

Abstract: Quantum random-access memory (QRAM) is a mechanism to access data (quantum or classical) based on addresses which are themselves a quantum state. QRAM has a long and controversial history, and here we survey and expand arguments and constructions for and against. We use two primary categories of QRAM from the literature: (1) active, which requires external intervention and control for each QRAM query (e.g. the error-corrected circuit model), and (2) passive, which requires no external input or energy once the query is initiated. In the active model, there is a powerful opportunity cost argument: in many applications, one could repurpose the control hardware for the qubits in the QRAM (or the qubits themselves) to run an extremely parallel classical algorithm to achieve the same results just as fast. Escaping these constraints requires ballistic computation with passive memory, which creates an array of dubious physical assumptions, which we examine in detail. Considering these details, in everything we could find, all non-circuit QRAM proposals fall short in one aspect or another. We apply these arguments in detail to quantum linear algebra and prove that most asymptotic quantum advantage disappears with active QRAM systems, with some nuance related to the architectural assumptions. In summary, we conclude that cheap, asymptotically scalable passive QRAM is unlikely with existing proposals, due to fundamental limitations that we highlight. We hope that our results will help guide research into QRAM technologies that attempt to circumvent or mitigate these limitations. Finally, circuit-based QRAM still helps in many applications, and so we additionally provide a survey of state-of-the-art techniques as a resource for algorithm designers using QRAM.

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