Classical free-space optical (FSO) communication promises massive data
throughput rates relative to traditional wireless technologies - an attractive
outcome now being pursued in the context of satellite-ground, inter-satellite
and deep-space communications. The question we investigate here is: how can we
minimally alter classical FSO systems, both in infrastructure and in energy
input, to provide some element of quantum communication coexisting with
classical communications? To address this question, we explore additional
Gaussian displacements to classical FSO encoding on the satellite, determining
the minimum signal requirements that will meet given specifications on the
combined classical and quantum communications throughput. We then investigate
whether enhanced quantum-based amplifiers embedded in receivers, which have
proven advantageous in standalone quantum communication, can enhance our
combined classical-quantum communication throughput. We show how this is indeed
the case, but only at the cost of some additional receiver complexity, relative
to standalone quantum communications. This additional complexity takes the form
of an additional beamsplitter and two heterodyne detectors at the receiver. Our
results illustrate a viable pathway to realising quantum communication from
classical FSO systems with minimal design changes.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in IEEE QCNC 2024
conference proceeding