3,517 research outputs found
Loss-tolerant quantum secure positioning with weak laser sources
Quantum position verification (QPV) is the art of verifying the geographical
location of an untrusted party. Recently, it has been shown that the widely
studied Bennett & Brassard 1984 (BB84) QPV protocol is insecure after the 3 dB
loss point assuming local operations and classical communication (LOCC)
adversaries. Here, we propose a time-reversed entanglement swapping QPV
protocol (based on measurement-device-independent quantum cryptography) that is
highly robust against quantum channel loss. First, assuming ideal qubit
sources, we show that the protocol is secure against LOCC adversaries for any
quantum channel loss, thereby overcoming the 3 dB loss limit. Then, we analyze
the security of the protocol in a more practical setting involving weak laser
sources and linear optics. In this setting, we find that the security only
degrades by an additive constant and the protocol is able to verify positions
up to 47 dB channel loss.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures. Partially based on an earlier work in
arXiv:1510.0489
Journal publishing with Acrobat: the CAJUN project
The publication of material in electronic form should ideally preserve, in a unified document representation, all of the richness of the printed document while maintaining enough of its underlying structure to enable searching and other forms of semantic processing. Until recently it has been hard to find a document representation which combined these attributes and which also stood some chance of becoming a de facto multi-platform standard.
This paper sets out experience gained within the Electronic Publishing Research Group at the University of Nottingham in using Adobe Acrobat software and its underlying PDF (Portable Document Format) notation. The CAJUN project1 (CD-ROM Acrobat Journals Using Networks) began in 1993 and has used Acrobat software to produce electronic versions of journal papers for network and CD-ROM dissemination. The paper describes the project's progress so far and also gives a brief assessment of PDF's suitability as a universal document interchange standard
Continuous-variable quantum key distribution field-test with true local oscillator
Continuous-variable quantum key distribution (CV-QKD) using a true local
(located at the receiver) oscillator (LO) has been proposed to remove any
possibility of side-channel attacks associated with transmission of the LO as
well as reduce the cross-pulse contamination. Here we report an implementation
of true LO CV-QKD using "off-the-shelf" components and conduct QKD experiments
using the fiber optical network at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. A phase
reference and quantum signal are time multiplexed and then wavelength division
multiplexed with the classical communications which "coexist" with each other
on a single optical network fiber. This is the first demonstration of CV-QKD
with a receiver-based true LO over a deployed fiber network, a crucial step for
its application in real-world situations
Single-Bottleneck Approximation for Driven Lattice Gases with Disorder and Open Boundary Conditions
We investigate the effects of disorder on driven lattice gases with open
boundaries using the totally asymmetric simple exclusion process as a
paradigmatic example. Disorder is realized by randomly distributed defect sites
with reduced hopping rate. In contrast to equilibrium, even macroscopic
quantities in disordered non-equilibrium systems depend sensitively on the
defect sample. We study the current as function of the entry and exit rates and
the realization of disorder and find that it is, in leading order, determined
by the longest stretch of consecutive defect sites (single-bottleneck
approximation, SBA). Using results from extreme value statistics the SBA allows
to study ensembles with fixed defect density which gives accurate results, e.g.
for the expectation value of the current. Corrections to SBA come from
effective interactions of bottlenecks close to the longest one. Defects close
to the boundaries can be described by effective boundary rates and lead to
shifts of the phase transitions. Finally it is shown that the SBA also works
for more complex models. As an example we discuss a model with internal states
that has been proposed to describe transport of the kinesin KIF1A.Comment: submitted to J. Stat. Mec
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