TITLE:
Why Oracle-Based Quantum Search Cannot Use Deep Loops: Physical Limits on Sequential Operations
AUTHORS:
Ying Liu
KEYWORDS:
Quantum Algorithms, Coherence Time, Decoherence, Gate Fidelity, Loop Depth Barrier, Grover’s Algorithm, Oracle, Oracle-Based Algorithm, Quantum Search, Margolus-Levitin Bound, Amplitude Amplification
JOURNAL NAME:
Journal of Quantum Information Science,
Vol.16 No.1,
March
4,
2026
ABSTRACT: Oracle-based quantum algorithms cannot use deep loops because quantum states exist only as mathematical amplitudes in Hilbert space with no physical substrate. Critically, quantum wave functions are inherently self-destructive. Quantum information must complete all operations within decoherence time, T2, before the state is destroyed, fundamentally limiting implementable circuit depth. This constraint is particularly severe for algorithms like Grover’s search, which requires
O(
N
)
sequential iterations. We identify what we term the Loop Depth Barrier (or Quantum Loop Barrier): any quantum algorithm requiring f(N) sequential operations faces the physical constraint f(N) × tgate T2, where tgate is the gate operation time. We analyze a concrete reinforcement learning problem to quantify these limits. For this problem requiring search over 320 states, we systematically compare multiple physical factors limiting quantum loop depth. We identify that the most restrictive limits arise from coherence time and gate fidelity constraints. The coherence time constraint limits implementable loops to approximately 104 iterations on superconducting hardware and 106 iterations on ion traps. The gate fidelity constraint, accounting for cumulative errors over deep sequential circuits, limits reliable loops to approximately 1000 iterations. Both constraints are severely restrictive, falling short of requirements by many applications. Critically, we identify that these limits arise from fundamental physics—quantum states have no persistent physical substrate and decohere on timescale T2, bounded by the Margolus-Levitin limit on operation speed and the Heisenberg uncertainty principle on state fidelity. These cannot be overcome by technological advancement; they represent absolute physical constraints on sequential quantum operations. We demonstrate a fundamental asymmetry in scaling: For Grover-type algorithms with problem size N = kT, qubit requirements scale linearly as O(T) (manageable through engineering), while sequential operation requirements scale as
O(
k
T
)=O(
k
T/2
)
, exponentially exceeding available coherence time T2. Decoherence time improvements are logarithmic while algorithm requirements are exponential in problem size, which suggests the barrier is fundamental to quantum physics rather than a temporary engineering challenge.