166 research outputs found
A quantum key distribution protocol for rapid denial of service detection
We introduce a quantum key distribution protocol designed to expose fake
users that connect to Alice or Bob for the purpose of monopolising the link and
denying service. It inherently resists attempts to exhaust Alice and Bob's
initial shared secret, and is 100% efficient, regardless of the number of
qubits exchanged above the finite key limit. Additionally, secure key can be
generated from two-photon pulses, without having to make any extra
modifications. This is made possible by relaxing the security of BB84 to that
of the quantum-safe block cipher used for day-to-day encryption, meaning the
overall security remains unaffected for useful real-world cryptosystems such as
AES-GCM being keyed with quantum devices.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures. v2: Shifted focus of paper towards DoS and added
protocol 4. v1: Accepted to QCrypt 201
In-situ measurements of fabrication induced strain in diamond photonic-structures using intrinsic colour centres
Diamond has established itself as an ideal material for photonics and optomechanics, due to its broad-band transparency and hardness. In addition, colour centres hosted within its lattice such as the nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centre, have become leading candidates for use in quantum information processing, and quantum sensors. The fabrication of nanoscale devices coupled to high quality NVs has been an outstanding challenge due to their sensitivity to magnetic, electric and strain fields within their local environment. In this work, we show how the NV centre’s ground state electron spin can be used as an embedded atomic-scale probe of the local strain caused by focused ion beam milling of nanoscale devices. This technique can thus be used to measure, and optimise material and device fabrication processes to allow diamond to reach its full potential
Controlling and measuring a superposition of position and momentum
The dynamics of a particle propagating in free space is described by its
position and momentum, where quantum mechanics prohibits the simultaneous
identification of two non-commutative physical quantities. Recently, a lower
bound on the probability of finding a particle after propagating for a given
time has been derived for well-defined initial constraints on position and
momentum under the assumption that particles travel in straight lines. Here, we
investigate this lower limit experimentally with photons. We prepared a
superposition of position and momentum states by using slits, lenses and an
interferometer, and observed a quantum interference between position and
momentum. The lower bound was then evaluated using the initial state and the
result was 5.9\% below this classical bound.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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