Universal points in the asymptotic spectrum of tensors

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

Universal points in the asymptotic spectrum of tensors. / Christandl, Matthias; Vrana, Péter; Zuiddam, Jeroen.

STOC 2018 - Proceedings of the 50th Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing. ed. / Monika Henzinger; David Kempe; Ilias Diakonikolas. Association for Computing Machinery, 2018. p. 289-296.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Christandl, M, Vrana, P & Zuiddam, J 2018, Universal points in the asymptotic spectrum of tensors. in M Henzinger, D Kempe & I Diakonikolas (eds), STOC 2018 - Proceedings of the 50th Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing. Association for Computing Machinery, pp. 289-296, 50th Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing, STOC 2018, Los Angeles, United States, 25/06/2018. https://doi.org/10.1145/3188745.3188766

APA

Christandl, M., Vrana, P., & Zuiddam, J. (2018). Universal points in the asymptotic spectrum of tensors. In M. Henzinger, D. Kempe, & I. Diakonikolas (Eds.), STOC 2018 - Proceedings of the 50th Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing (pp. 289-296). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3188745.3188766

Vancouver

Christandl M, Vrana P, Zuiddam J. Universal points in the asymptotic spectrum of tensors. In Henzinger M, Kempe D, Diakonikolas I, editors, STOC 2018 - Proceedings of the 50th Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing. Association for Computing Machinery. 2018. p. 289-296 https://doi.org/10.1145/3188745.3188766

Author

Christandl, Matthias ; Vrana, Péter ; Zuiddam, Jeroen. / Universal points in the asymptotic spectrum of tensors. STOC 2018 - Proceedings of the 50th Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing. editor / Monika Henzinger ; David Kempe ; Ilias Diakonikolas. Association for Computing Machinery, 2018. pp. 289-296

Bibtex

@inproceedings{515c2d65ec43437d8428035206a9b77d,
title = "Universal points in the asymptotic spectrum of tensors",
abstract = "The asymptotic restriction problem for tensors s and t is to find the smallest ≥ 0 such that the nth tensor power of t can be obtained from the (n + o(n))th tensor power of s by applying linear maps to the tensor legs — this is called restriction — when n goes to infinity. Applications include computing the arithmetic complexity of matrix multiplication in algebraic complexity theory, deciding the feasibility of an asymptotic transformation between pure quantum States via stochastic local operations and classical communication in quantum information theory, bounding the query complexity of certain properties in algebraic property testing, and bounding the size of combinatorial structures like tri-colored sum-free sets in additive combinatorics. Naturally, the asymptotic restriction problem asks for obstructions (think of lower bounds in computational complexity) and constructions (think of fast matrix multiplication algorithms). Strassen showed that for obstructions it is sufficient to consider maps from k-tensors to nonnegative reals, that are monotone under restriction, normalised on diagonal tensors, additive under direct sum and multiplicative under tensor product, named spectral points (SFCS 1986 and J. Reine Angew. Math. 1988). Strassen introduced the support functionals, which are spectral points for oblique tensors, a strict subfamily of all tensors (J. Reine Angew. Math. 1991). On the construction side, an important work is the Coppersmith–Winograd method for tight tensors and tight sets. We present the first nontrivial spectral points for the family of all complex tensors, named quantum functionals. Finding such universal spectral points has been an open problem for thirty years. We use techniques from quantum information theory, invariant theory and moment polytopes. We present comparisons among the support functionals and our quantum functionals, and compute generic values. We relate the functionals to instability from geometric invariant theory, in the spirit of Blasiak et al. (Discrete Anal. 2017). We prove that the quantum functionals are asymptotic upper bounds on slice-rank and multi-slice rank, extending a result of Tao and Sawin.",
keywords = "Asymptotic restriction, Asymptotic spectrum, Cap set problem, Classical communication (slocc), Entanglement monotones, Fast matrix multiplication, Moment polytope, Quantum entropy, Reduced polynomial multiplication, Stochastic local operations, Tensors",
author = "Matthias Christandl and P{\'e}ter Vrana and Jeroen Zuiddam",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1145/3188745.3188766",
language = "English",
pages = "289--296",
editor = "Monika Henzinger and David Kempe and Ilias Diakonikolas",
booktitle = "STOC 2018 - Proceedings of the 50th Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing",
publisher = "Association for Computing Machinery",
note = "50th Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing, STOC 2018 ; Conference date: 25-06-2018 Through 29-06-2018",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Universal points in the asymptotic spectrum of tensors

AU - Christandl, Matthias

AU - Vrana, Péter

AU - Zuiddam, Jeroen

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - The asymptotic restriction problem for tensors s and t is to find the smallest ≥ 0 such that the nth tensor power of t can be obtained from the (n + o(n))th tensor power of s by applying linear maps to the tensor legs — this is called restriction — when n goes to infinity. Applications include computing the arithmetic complexity of matrix multiplication in algebraic complexity theory, deciding the feasibility of an asymptotic transformation between pure quantum States via stochastic local operations and classical communication in quantum information theory, bounding the query complexity of certain properties in algebraic property testing, and bounding the size of combinatorial structures like tri-colored sum-free sets in additive combinatorics. Naturally, the asymptotic restriction problem asks for obstructions (think of lower bounds in computational complexity) and constructions (think of fast matrix multiplication algorithms). Strassen showed that for obstructions it is sufficient to consider maps from k-tensors to nonnegative reals, that are monotone under restriction, normalised on diagonal tensors, additive under direct sum and multiplicative under tensor product, named spectral points (SFCS 1986 and J. Reine Angew. Math. 1988). Strassen introduced the support functionals, which are spectral points for oblique tensors, a strict subfamily of all tensors (J. Reine Angew. Math. 1991). On the construction side, an important work is the Coppersmith–Winograd method for tight tensors and tight sets. We present the first nontrivial spectral points for the family of all complex tensors, named quantum functionals. Finding such universal spectral points has been an open problem for thirty years. We use techniques from quantum information theory, invariant theory and moment polytopes. We present comparisons among the support functionals and our quantum functionals, and compute generic values. We relate the functionals to instability from geometric invariant theory, in the spirit of Blasiak et al. (Discrete Anal. 2017). We prove that the quantum functionals are asymptotic upper bounds on slice-rank and multi-slice rank, extending a result of Tao and Sawin.

AB - The asymptotic restriction problem for tensors s and t is to find the smallest ≥ 0 such that the nth tensor power of t can be obtained from the (n + o(n))th tensor power of s by applying linear maps to the tensor legs — this is called restriction — when n goes to infinity. Applications include computing the arithmetic complexity of matrix multiplication in algebraic complexity theory, deciding the feasibility of an asymptotic transformation between pure quantum States via stochastic local operations and classical communication in quantum information theory, bounding the query complexity of certain properties in algebraic property testing, and bounding the size of combinatorial structures like tri-colored sum-free sets in additive combinatorics. Naturally, the asymptotic restriction problem asks for obstructions (think of lower bounds in computational complexity) and constructions (think of fast matrix multiplication algorithms). Strassen showed that for obstructions it is sufficient to consider maps from k-tensors to nonnegative reals, that are monotone under restriction, normalised on diagonal tensors, additive under direct sum and multiplicative under tensor product, named spectral points (SFCS 1986 and J. Reine Angew. Math. 1988). Strassen introduced the support functionals, which are spectral points for oblique tensors, a strict subfamily of all tensors (J. Reine Angew. Math. 1991). On the construction side, an important work is the Coppersmith–Winograd method for tight tensors and tight sets. We present the first nontrivial spectral points for the family of all complex tensors, named quantum functionals. Finding such universal spectral points has been an open problem for thirty years. We use techniques from quantum information theory, invariant theory and moment polytopes. We present comparisons among the support functionals and our quantum functionals, and compute generic values. We relate the functionals to instability from geometric invariant theory, in the spirit of Blasiak et al. (Discrete Anal. 2017). We prove that the quantum functionals are asymptotic upper bounds on slice-rank and multi-slice rank, extending a result of Tao and Sawin.

KW - Asymptotic restriction

KW - Asymptotic spectrum

KW - Cap set problem

KW - Classical communication (slocc)

KW - Entanglement monotones

KW - Fast matrix multiplication

KW - Moment polytope

KW - Quantum entropy

KW - Reduced polynomial multiplication

KW - Stochastic local operations

KW - Tensors

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U2 - 10.1145/3188745.3188766

DO - 10.1145/3188745.3188766

M3 - Article in proceedings

AN - SCOPUS:85049884625

SP - 289

EP - 296

BT - STOC 2018 - Proceedings of the 50th Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing

A2 - Henzinger, Monika

A2 - Kempe, David

A2 - Diakonikolas, Ilias

PB - Association for Computing Machinery

T2 - 50th Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing, STOC 2018

Y2 - 25 June 2018 through 29 June 2018

ER -

ID: 215040243