Posted

François Le Gall, Suguru Tamaki (Apr 15 2026).
Abstract: The short-path quantum algorithm introduced by Hastings (Quantum 2018, 2019) is a variant of adiabatic quantum algorithms that enables an easier worst-case analysis by avoiding the need to control the spectral gap along a long adiabatic path. Dalzell, Pancotti, Campbell, and Brandão (STOC 2023) recently revisited this framework and obtained a clear analysis of the complexity of the short-path algorithm for several classes of constraint satisfaction problems (MAX-kk-CSPs), leading to quantum algorithms with complexity 2(1c)n/22^{(1-c)n/2} for some constant c>0c>0. This suggested a super-quadratic quantum advantage over classical algorithms. In this work, we identify an explicit classical mechanism underlying a substantial part of this line of work, and show that it leads to clean dequantizations. As a consequence, we obtain classical algorithms that run in time 2(1c)n2^{(1-c')n}, for some constant c>cc'>c, for the same classes of constraint satisfaction problems. This shows that current short-path quantum algorithms for these problems do not achieve a super-quadratic advantage. On the positive side, our results provide a new ``quantum-inspired'' approach to designing classical algorithms for important classes of constraint satisfaction problems.

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