Posted

Daniel Grier, Jackson Morris, Kewen Wu (Jan 07 2026).
Abstract: QAC0\mathsf{QAC}^0 is the class of constant-depth polynomial-size quantum circuits constructed from arbitrary single-qubit gates and generalized Toffoli gates. It is arguably the smallest natural class of constant-depth quantum computation which has not been shown useful for computing any non-trivial Boolean function. Despite this, many attempts to port classical AC0\mathsf{AC}^0 lower bounds to QAC0\mathsf{QAC}^0 have failed. We give one possible explanation of this: QAC0\mathsf{QAC}^0 circuits are significantly more powerful than their classical counterparts. We show the unconditional separation QAC0⊄AC0[p]\mathsf{QAC}^0\not\subset\mathsf{AC}^0[p] for decision problems, which also resolves for the first time whether AC0\mathsf{AC}^0 could be more powerful than QAC0\mathsf{QAC}^0. Moreover, we prove that QAC0\mathsf{QAC}^0 circuits can compute a wide range of Boolean functions if given multiple copies of the input: TC0QAC0NC0\mathsf{TC}^0 \subseteq \mathsf{QAC}^0 \circ \mathsf{NC}^0. Along the way, we introduce an amplitude amplification technique that makes several approximate constant-depth constructions exact.

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