93 research outputs found
Single photon quantum cryptography
We report the full implementation of a quantum cryptography protocol using a
stream of single photon pulses generated by a stable and efficient source
operating at room temperature. The single photon pulses are emitted on demand
by a single nitrogen-vacancy (NV) color center in a diamond nanocrystal. The
quantum bit error rate is less that 4.6% and the secure bit rate is 9500
bits/s. The overall performances of our system reaches a domain where single
photons have a measurable advantage over an equivalent system based on
attenuated light pulses.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Virtual Entanglement and Reconciliation Protocols for Quantum Cryptography with Continuous Variables
We discuss quantum key distribution protocols using quantum continuous
variables. We show that such protocols can be made secure against individual
gaussian attacks regardless the transmission of the optical line between Alice
and Bob. This is achieved by reversing the reconciliation procedure subsequent
to the quantum transmission, that is, using Bob's instead of Alice's data to
build the key. Although squeezing or entanglement may be helpful to improve the
resistance to noise, they are not required for the protocols to remain secure
with high losses. Therefore, these protocols can be implemented very simply by
transmitting coherent states and performing homodyne detection. Here, we show
that entanglement nevertheless plays a crucial role in the security analysis of
coherent state protocols. Every cryptographic protocol based on displaced
gaussian states turns out to be equivalent to an entanglement-based protocol,
even though no entanglement is actually present. This equivalence even holds in
the absence of squeezing, for coherent state protocols. This ``virtual''
entanglement is important to assess the security of these protocols as it
provides an upper bound on the mutual information between Alice and Bob if they
had used entanglement. The resulting security criteria are compared to the
separability criterion for bipartite gaussian variables. It appears that the
security thresholds are well within the entanglement region. This supports the
idea that coherent state quantum cryptography may be unconditionally secure.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures. Submitted to QI
Proposal for a loophole-free Bell test using homodyne detection
We propose a feasible optical setup allowing for a loophole-free Bell test
with efficient homodyne detection. A non-gaussian entangled state is generated
from a two-mode squeezed vacuum by subtracting a single photon from each mode,
using beamsplitters and standard low-efficiency single-photon detectors. A Bell
violation exceeding 1% is achievable with 6-dB squeezed light and an homodyne
efficiency around 95%. A detailed feasibility analysis, based upon the recent
generation of single-mode non-gaussian states, confirms that this method opens
a promising avenue towards a complete experimental Bell test.Comment: 4 pages RevTex, 2 figure
Controlling the quantum state of a single photon emitted from a single polariton
We investigate in detail the optimal conditions for a high fidelity transfer
from a single-polariton state to a single-photon state and subsequent homodyne
detection of the single photon. We assume that, using various possible
techniques, the single polariton has initially been stored as a spin-wave
grating in a cloud of cold atoms inside a low-finesse cavity. This state is
then transferred to a single-photon optical pulse using an auxiliary beam. We
optimize the retrieval efficiency and determine the mode of the local
oscillator that maximizes the homodyne efficiency of such a photon. We find
that both efficiencies can have values close to one in a large region of
experimental parameters.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
Room temperature stable single-photon source
We report on the realization of a stable solid state room temperature source
for single photons. It is based on the fluorescence of a single
nitrogen-vacancy (NV) color center in a diamond nanocrystal. Antibunching has
been observed in the fluorescence light under both continuous and pulsed
excitation. Our source delivers 2*10^4 single-photon pulses per second at an
excitation repetition rate of 10 MHz. The number of two-photon pulses is
reduced by a factor of five compared to strongly attenuated coherent sources.Comment: 7 pages, 10 figures, accepted to the special issue of the European
Physical Journal D on "Quantum interference and cryptographic keys: novel
physics and advancing technologies", proceedings of the conference QUICK 200
Experimental open air quantum key distribution with a single photon source
We present a full implementation of a quantum key distribution (QKD) system
with a single photon source, operating at night in open air. The single photon
source at the heart of the functional and reliable setup relies on the pulsed
excitation of a single nitrogen-vacancy color center in diamond nanocrystal. We
tested the effect of attenuation on the polarized encoded photons for inferring
longer distance performance of our system. For strong attenuation, the use of
pure single photon states gives measurable advantage over systems relying on
weak attenuated laser pulses. The results are in good agreement with
theoretical models developed to assess QKD security
Sub-optical resolution of single spins using magnetic resonance imaging at room temperature in diamond
There has been much recent interest in extending the technique of magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) down to the level of single spins with sub-optical
wavelength resolution. However, the signal to noise ratio for images of
individual spins is usually low and this necessitates long acquisition times
and low temperatures to achieve high resolution. An exception to this is the
nitrogen-vacancy (NV) color center in diamond whose spin state can be detected
optically at room temperature. Here we apply MRI to magnetically equivalent NV
spins in order to resolve them with resolution well below the optical
wavelength of the readout light. In addition, using a microwave version of MRI
we achieved a resolution that is 1/270 size of the coplanar striplines, which
define the effective wavelength of the microwaves that were used to excite the
transition. This technique can eventually be extended to imaging of large
numbers of NVs in a confocal spot and possibly to image nearby dark spins via
their mutual magnetic interaction with the NV spin.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, Journal of Luminescence (Article in Press
On the distillation and purification of phase-diffused squeezed states
Recently it was discovered that non-Gaussian decoherence processes, such as
phase-diffusion, can be counteracted by purification and distillation protocols
that are solely built on Gaussian operations. Here, we make use of this
experimentally highly accessible regime, and provide a detailed experimental
and theoretical analysis of several strategies for purification/distillation
protocols on phase-diffused squeezed states. Our results provide valuable
information for the optimization of such protocols with respect to the choice
of the trigger quadrature, the trigger threshold value and the probability of
generating a distilled state
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