Giacomo De Palma, Marco Fanizza, Connor Mowry, Ryan O'Donnell (Oct 08 2025).
Abstract: We study hypothesis testing (aka state certification) in the non-identically distributed setting. A recent work (Garg et al. 2023) considered the classical case, in which one is given (independent) samples from T unknown probability distributions p1,…,pT on [d]={1,2,…,d}, and one wishes to accept/reject the hypothesis that their average pavg equals a known hypothesis distribution q. Garg et al. showed that if one has just c=2 samples from each pi, and provided T≫ϵ2d+ϵ41, one can (whp) distinguish pavg=q from dTV(pavg,q)>ϵ. This nearly matches the optimal result for the classical iid setting (namely, T≫ϵ2d). Besides optimally improving this result (and generalizing to tolerant testing with more stringent distance measures), we study the analogous problem of hypothesis testing for non-identical quantum states. Here we uncover an unexpected phenomenon: for any d-dimensional hypothesis state σ, and given just a single copy (c=1) of each state ρ1,…,ρT, one can distinguish ρavg=σ from Dtr(ρavg,σ)>ϵ provided T≫d/ϵ2. (Again, we generalize to tolerant testing with more stringent distance measures.) This matches the optimal result for the iid case, which is surprising because doing this with c=1 is provably impossible in the classical case. We also show that the analogous phenomenon happens for the non-iid extension of identity testing between unknown states. A technical tool we introduce may be of independent interest: an Efron-Stein inequality, and more generally an Efron-Stein decomposition, in the quantum setting.
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