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Quantum Cryptography Security
Motion-Compensated Handheld Quantum Key Distribution System
arXiv
Authors: Hyunchae Chun, Iris Choi, Grahame Faulkner, Larry Clarke, Bryan Barber, Glenn George, Colin Capon, Antti Niskanen, Joachim Wabnig, Dominic OBrien, David Bitauld
Year
2016
Paper ID
7774
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
151
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Mobile devices have become an inseparable part of our everyday life. They are used to transmit an ever-increasing amount of sensitive health, financial and personal information. This exposes us to the growing scale and sophistication of cyber-attacks. Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) can provide unconditional and future-proof data security but implementing it for handheld mobile devices comes with specific challenges. To establish security, secret keys of sufficient length need to be transmitted during the time of a handheld transaction ( 1s) despite device misalignment, ambient light and user's inevitable hand movements. Transmitters and receivers should ideally be compact and low-cost, while avoiding security loopholes. Here we demonstrate the first QKD transmission from a handheld transmitter with a key-rate large enough to overcome finite key effects. Using dynamic beam-steering, reference-frame-independent encoding and fast indistinguishable pulse generation, we obtain a secret key rate above 30kb/s over a distance of 0.5m under ambient light conditions.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Cryptography & Security research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2016 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Mobile devices have become an inseparable part of our everyday life.
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