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Quantum Cryptography Security
Photon-efficient quantum cryptography with pulse-position modulation
arXiv
Authors: Tian Zhong, Feihu Xu, Zheshen Zhang, Hongchao Zhou, Alessandro Restelli, Joshua C. Bienfang, Ligong Wang, Gregory W. Wornell, Jeffrey H. Shapiro, Franco N. C. Wong
Year
2015
Paper ID
26589
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
129
Citations
N/A
Abstract
The binary (one-bit-per-photon) encoding that most existing quantum key distribution (QKD) protocols employ puts a fundamental limit on their achievable key rates, especially under high channel loss conditions associated with long-distance fiber-optic or satellite-to-ground links. Inspired by the pulse-position-modulation (PPM) approach to photon-starved classical communications, we design and demonstrate the first PPM-QKD, whose security against collective attacks is established through continuous-variable entanglement measurements that also enable a novel decoy-state protocol performed conveniently in post processing. We achieve a throughput of 8.0 Mbit/s (2.5 Mbit/s for loss equivalent to 25 km of fiber) and secret-key capacity up to 4.0 bits per detected photon, thus demonstrating the significant enhancement afforded by high-dimensional encoding. These results point to a new avenue for realizing high-throughput satellite-based or long-haul fiber-optic quantum communications beyond their photon-reception-rate limits.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Cryptography & Security research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- The binary (one-bit-per-photon) encoding that most existing quantum key distribution (QKD) protocols employ puts a fundamental limit on their achievable key rates, especially...
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