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Quantum theory promises computation speed-ups than classical means. The full power is believed to reside in "magic" states, or equivalently non-Clifford operations -- the secret sauce to establish universal quantum computing. Despite the celebrated Gottesman-Knill Theorem stating that magic-free computation can be efficiently simulated by a classical computer, it is still questionable whether "magic" is really magical. Indeed, all the existing results establish its supremacy for efficient computation upon unproven complexity assumptions or queries to black-box oracles. In this work, we show that the magic advantage can be unconditionally established, at least in a shallow circuit with a constant depth. For this purpose, we first construct a specific nonlocal game inspired by the linear binary constraint system, which requires the magic resource to generate the desired nonlocal statistics or quantum "pseudo telepathy." For a relation problem targeting generating such correlations between arbitrary nonlocal computation sites, we construct a shallow circuit with bounded fan-in gates that takes the strategy for quantum pseudo telepathy as a sub-routine to solve the problem with certainty. In contrast, magic-free counterparts inevitably require a logarithmic circuit depth to the input size, and the separation is proven optimal. As by-products, we prove that the nonlocal game we construct has non-unique perfect winning strategies, answering an open problem in quantum self-testing. We also provide an efficient algorithm to aid the search for potential magic-requiring nonlocal games similar to the current one. We anticipate our results to enlighten the ultimate establishment of the unconditional advantage of universal quantum computation.
Zhang et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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