Publication | Closed Access
Quantum key distribution: examination of the decoy state protocol
11
Citations
20
References
2015
Year
Hardware SecurityQuantum CryptographyQuantum ScienceQuantum SecurityEngineeringQuantum ComputingPhysicsNatural SciencesQuantum InformationQuantum ProtocolsQuantum NetworkQuantum CommunicationQuantum EntanglementQkd TechnologyCryptographyQuantum Key Distribution
Quantum key distribution (QKD) is an innovative technology that exploits the laws of quantum mechanics to generate and distribute a shared cryptographic key for secure communications. The unique nature of QKD ensures that eavesdropping on quantum communications necessarily introduces detectable errors which is desirable for high-security environments. QKD systems have been demonstrated in both freespace and optical fiber configurations, gaining global interest from national laboratories, commercial entities, and the U.S. Department of Defense. However, QKD is a nascent technology where realized systems are constructed from non-ideal components, which can significantly impact system performance and security. In this article, we describe QKD technology as part of a secure communications solution and identify vulnerabilities associated with practical network architectures. In particular, we examine the performance of decoy state enabled QKD systems against a modeled photon number splitting attack and suggest an improvement to the decoy state protocol security condition that does not assume a priori knowledge of the QKD channel efficiency.
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