Claims
- 1. A quantum cryptographic system comprising:
at least one sending unit comprising and encoder and distributing a raw key in the quadrature components of quantum coherent states that are continuously modulated in phase and amplitude; at least one receiving unit comprising a homodyne detector of the quantum coherent states in order to measure the quadrature components of the states; a quantum channel for connecting the sending unit to the receiving unit; and a two-way authenticated public channel for transmitting non-secret messages between the sending unit and the receiving unit.
- 2. The quantum cryptographic system of claim 1, further comprising a continuous-variable quantum key distribution protocol ensuring that the amount of information a potential eavesdropper may gain at most on the sent and received data can be estimated from the measured parameters of the quantum channel (error rate and line attenuation).
- 3. The quantum cryptographic system of claim 2, wherein the sent and received raw data resulting from the continuous-variable protocol are converted into a secret binary key by using a continuous reconciliation protocol supplemented with privacy amplification.
- 4. The quantum cryptographic system of claim 1, wherein the encoder of the quadrature components with a high signal-to-noise ratio encodes several key bits per coherent light pulse.
- 5. The quantum cryptographic system of claim 1, wherein the decoding of the quadrature components of the light field via the homodyne detector achieves high secret bit rates in comparison to photon-counting techniques.
- 6. The quantum cryptographic system of claim 3, wherein the continuous reconciliation protocol is a direct reconciliation protocol, which allows the receiver to discretize and correct its data according to the sent values, in case of noisy quantum channels with low losses.
- 7. The quantum cryptographic system of claim 3, wherein the continuous reconciliation protocol is a reverse reconciliation protocol, which allows the sending unit to discretize and correct its data according to the values measured by the receiver, in case of quantum channels with an attenuation that exceeds 3 dB.
- 8. The quantum cryptographic system of claim 3, wherein the secret key is used as a private key for ensuring confidentiality and authentication of a cryptographic transmission.
- 9. The quantum cryptographic system of claim 1, wherein the quadrature components of the quantum coherent states are modulated with a Gaussian distribution.
- 10. The quantum cryptographic system of claim 9, wherein the co-ordinate values of the center of the Gaussian distribution are arbitrary.
- 11. The quantum cryptographic system of claim 9, wherein the variance of the Gaussian distribution for the quadrature X is different from the variance of the Gaussian distribution for the conjugate quadrature P.
- 12. The quantum cryptographic system of claim 9, wherein the Gaussian-modulated coherent sates are attenuated laser light pulses typically containing several photons.
- 13. The quantum cryptographic system of claim 12, wherein the information an eavesdropper may gain on the sent and received Gaussian-distributed values are calculated explicitly using Shannon's theory for Gaussian channels.
- 14. A method of distributing continuous quantum key between two parties which are a sender and a receiver, the method comprising:
selecting, at a sender, two random numbers xA and pA from a Gaussian distribution of mean zero and variance VAN0, where N0 refers to the shot-noise variance; sending a corresponding coherent state |xA+ipA> in the quantum channel; randomly choosing, at a receiver, to measure either quadrature x or p using homodyne detection; informing the sender about the quadrature that was measured so the sender may discard the wrong one; measuring channel parameters on a random subset of the sender's and receiver's data, in order to evaluate the maximum information acquired by an eavesdropper; and converting the resulting raw key in the form of a set of correlated Gaussian variables into a binary secret key comprising direct or reverse reconciliation in order to correct the errors and get a binary key, and privacy amplification in order to make secret the binary key.
- 15. The method of claim 14, wherein the reconciliation produces a common bit string from correlated continuous data, which comprises the following:
transforming each Gaussian key element of a block of size n by the sender into a string of m bits, giving m bit strings of length n, referred to as slices; converting, by the receiver, the measured key elements into binary strings by using a set of slice estimators; and sequentially reconciliating the slices by using an implementation of a binary error correction algorithm, and communicating on the public authenticated channel.
- 16. The method of claim 14, wherein the post-processing of privacy amplification comprises distilling a secret key out of the reconciliated key by use of a random transformation taken in a universal class of hash functions.
- 17. A device for implementing a continuous-variable quantum key exchange, the device comprising:
a light source or a source of electromagnetic signals configured to generate short quantum coherent pulses at a high repetition rate; an optical component configured to modulate the amplitude and phase of the pulses at a high frequency; a quantum channel configured to transmit the pulses from an emitter to a receiver; a system that permits the transmission of a local oscillator from the emitter to the receiver; a homodyne detector capable of measuring, at a high acquisition frequency, any quadrature component of the electromagnetic field collected at the receiver's station; a two-way authenticated public channel that is used to communicating non-secret messages in postprocessing protocols; and a computer at the emitter's and receiver's stations that drives or reads the optical components and runs the postprocessing protocols.
- 18. The device of claim 17, wherein a local oscillator is transmitted together with the signal by use of a polarization encoding system whereby each pulse comprises a strong local oscillator pulse and a weak orthogonally-polarized signal pulse with modulated amplitude and phase.
- 19. The device of claim 18, wherein if polarization encoding is used, the receiving system relies on polarization-mode homodyne detection requiring a quarter-wave plate and a polarizing beam splitter.
- 20. A device for exchanging Gaussian key elements between two parties which are a sender and a receiver, the device comprising:
a laser diode associated with a grating-extended external cavity, the laser diode configured to send light pulses at a high repetition rate, each pulse typically containing several photons; an integrated electro-optic amplitude modulator and a piezoelectric phase modulator, configured to generate randomly-modulated light pulses, the data being organized in bursts of pulses; a beam-splitter to separate the quantum signal from a local oscillator; and a homodyne detector combining the quantum signal and local oscillator pulses in order to measure one of the two quadrature components of the light field.
- 21. The device of claim 20, further comprising an acquisition board and a computer on the sender's and receiver's sides in order to run the post-processing protocols.
- 22. The device of claim 20, wherein the laser operates at a wavelength comprised between about 700 and about 1600 nm.
- 23. The device of claim 20, wherein the laser operates at a wavelength comprising telecom wavelengths between about 1540 and about 1580 nm.
- 24. The method of claim 14, wherein informing the sender comprises utilizing a public authenticated channel by the receiver to inform the sender.
- 25. The method of claim 14, wherein the channel parameters include an error rate and a line attenuation.
- 26. The device of claim 17, additional comprising:
means for selecting, at the emitter, two random numbers xA and pA from a Gaussian distribution of mean zero and variance VAN0, where N0 refers to the shot-noise variance; means for sending a corresponding coherent state |xA+ipA> in the quantum channel; means for randomly choosing, at the receiver, to measure either quadrature x or p using homodyne detection; means for informing the emitter about the quadrature that was measured so the emitter may discard the wrong one; means for measuring channel parameters on a random subset of the emitter's and receiver's data, in order to evaluate the maximum information acquired by an eavesdropper; and means for converting the resulting raw key in the form of a set of correlated Gaussian variables into a binary secret key comprising direct or reverse reconciliation in order to correct the errors and get a binary key, and privacy amplification in order to make secret the binary key.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This patent application takes priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/394,330, filed on Jul. 5, 2002, which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60394330 |
Jul 2002 |
US |