247 research outputs found
Photonic Engineering for CV-QKD over Earth-Satellite Channels
Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) via satellite offers up the possibility of
unconditionally secure communications on a global scale. Increasing the secret
key rate in such systems, via photonic engineering at the source, is a topic of
much ongoing research. In this work we investigate the use of photon-added
states and photon-subtracted states, derived from two mode squeezed vacuum
states, as examples of such photonic engineering. Specifically, we determine
which engineered-photonic state provides for better QKD performance when
implemented over channels connecting terrestrial receivers with Low-Earth-Orbit
satellites. We quantify the impact the number of photons that are added or
subtracted has, and highlight the role played by the adopted model for
atmospheric turbulence and loss on the predicted key rates. Our results are
presented in terms of the complexity of deployment used, with the simplest
deployments ignoring any estimate of the channel, and the more sophisticated
deployments involving a feedback loop that is used to optimize the key rate for
each channel estimation. The optimal quantum state is identified for each
deployment scenario investigated.Comment: Updated reference lis
Quantum Entanglement Distribution in Next-Generation Wireless Communication Systems
In this work we analyze the distribution of quantum entanglement over
communication channels in the millimeter-wave regime. The motivation for such a
study is the possibility for next-generation wireless networks (beyond 5G) to
accommodate such a distribution directly - without the need to integrate
additional optical communication hardware into the transceivers. Future
wireless communication systems are bound to require some level of quantum
communications capability. We find that direct quantum-entanglement
distribution in the millimeter-wave regime is indeed possible, but that its
implementation will be very demanding from both a system-design perspective and
a channel-requirement perspective.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Continuous-variable quantum key distribution in fast fading channels
We investigate the performance of several continuous-variable quantum key distribution protocols in the presence of fading channels. These are lossy channels whose transmissivity changes according to a probability distribution. This is typical in communication scenarios where remote parties are connected by free-space links subject to atmospheric turbulence. In this work, we assume the worst-case scenario where an eavesdropper has full control of a fast fading process, so that she chooses the instantaneous transmissivity of a channel, while the remote parties can only detect the mean statistical process. In our study, we consider coherent-state protocols run in various configurations, including the one-way switching protocol in reverse reconciliation, the measurement-device-independent protocol in the symmetric configuration and a three-party measurement-device-independent network. We show that, regardless of the advantage given to the eavesdropper (full control of fading), these protocols can still achieve high rates
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