Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4656712 Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B 2016 40 Pages PDF
Abstract

A homomorphism from a graph X to a graph Y   is an adjacency preserving map f:V(X)→V(Y)f:V(X)→V(Y). We consider a nonlocal game in which Alice and Bob are trying to convince a verifier with certainty that a graph X admits a homomorphism to Y. This is a generalization of the well-studied graph coloring game. Via systematic study of quantum homomorphisms we prove new results for graph coloring. Most importantly, we show that the Lovász theta number of the complement is a lower bound on the quantum chromatic number, the latter of which is not known to be computable. We also show that some of our newly introduced graph parameters, namely quantum independence and clique numbers, can differ from their classical counterparts while others, namely quantum odd girth, cannot. Finally, we show that quantum homomorphisms closely relate to zero-error channel capacity. In particular, we use quantum homomorphisms to construct graphs for which entanglement-assistance increases their one-shot zero-error capacity.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Discrete Mathematics and Combinatorics
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