7 research outputs found
Creation of backdoors in quantum communications via laser damage
Practical quantum communication (QC) protocols are assumed to be secure
provided implemented devices are properly characterized and all known side
channels are closed. We show that this is not always true. We demonstrate a
laser-damage attack capable of modifying device behaviour on-demand. We test it
on two practical QC systems for key distribution and coin-tossing, and show
that newly created deviations lead to side channels. This reveals that laser
damage is a potential security risk to existing QC systems, and necessitates
their testing to guarantee security.Comment: Changed the title to match the journal version. 9 pages, 5 figure
Direct measurement of superluminal group velocity and of signal velocity in an optical fiber
We present an easy way of observing superluminal group velocities using a
birefringent optical fiber and other standard devices. In the theoretical
analysis, we show that the optical properties of the setup can be described
using the notion of "weak value". The experiment shows that the group velocity
can indeed exceed c in the fiber; and we report the first direct observation of
the so-called "signal velocity", the speed at which information propagates and
that cannot exceed c.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Experimental plug and play quantum coin flipping
Performing complex cryptographic tasks will be an essential element in future
quantum communication networks. These tasks are based on a handful of
fundamental primitives, such as coin flipping, where two distrustful parties
wish to agree on a randomly generated bit. Although it is known that quantum
versions of these primitives can offer information-theoretic security
advantages with respect to classical protocols, a demonstration of such an
advantage in a practical communication scenario has remained elusive. Here, we
experimentally implement a quantum coin flipping protocol that performs
strictly better than classically possible over a distance suitable for
communication over metropolitan area optical networks. The implementation is
based on a practical plug&play system, designed for quantum key distribution.
We also show how to combine our protocol with coin flipping protocols that are
almost perfectly secure against bounded adversaries, hence enhancing them with
a level of information-theoretic security. Our results offer a powerful toolbox
for future secure quantum communications.Comment: Version 2, 19 pages including detailed security analysi