Electronic communication is used everyday for a number of different applications.
Some of the information transferred during these communications can be private
requiring encryption and authentication protocols to keep this information secure.
Although there are protocols today which provide some security, they are not
necessarily unconditionally secure. Quantum based protocols on the other hand, can
provide unconditionally secure protocols for encryption and authentication.
Prior to this Thesis, only one experimental realisation of quantum digital signatures had
been demonstrated. This used a lossy photonic device along with a quantum memory
allowing two parties to test whether they were sent the same signature by a single
sender, and also store the quantum states for measurement later. This restricted the
demonstration to distances of only a few metres, and was tested with a primitive
approximation of a quantum memory rather than an actual one. This Thesis presents an
experimental realisation of a quantum digital signature protocol which removes the
reliance on quantum memory at the receivers, making a major step towards practicality.
By removing the quantum memory, it was also possible to perform the swap and
comparison mechanism in a more efficient manner resulting in an experimental
realisation of quantum digital signatures over 2 kilometres of optical fibre.
Quantum communication protocols can be unconditionally secure, however the
transmission distance is limited by loss in quantum channels. To overcome this loss in
conventional channels an optical amplifier is used, however the added noise from these
would swamp the quantum signal if directly used in quantum communications.
This Thesis looked into probabilistic quantum amplification, with an experimental
realisation of the state comparison amplifier, based on linear optical components and
single-photon detectors. The state comparison amplifier operated by using the wellestablished
techniques of optical coherent state comparison and weak subtraction to
post-select the output and provide non-deterministic amplification with increased
fidelity at a high repetition rate. The success rates of this amplifier were found to be
orders of magnitude greater than other state of the art quantum amplifiers, due to its lack
of requirement for complex quantum resources, such as single or entangled photon
sources, and photon number resolving detectors