Satellite-Based Quantum Key Distribution in the Presence of Bypass
Channels
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2212.04807v2
- Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2023 11:15:32 GMT
- Title: Satellite-Based Quantum Key Distribution in the Presence of Bypass
Channels
- Authors: Masoud Ghalaii and Sima Bahrani and Carlo Liorni and Federico
Grasselli and Hermann Kampermann and Lewis Wooltorton and Rupesh Kumar and
Stefano Pirandola and Timothy P. Spiller and Alexander Ling and Bruno Huttner
and Mohsen Razavi
- Abstract summary: Security of quantum key distribution under restricted eavesdropping scenarios is addressed.
We find regimes of operation in which the above restrictions on Eve can considerably improve system performance.
Our work opens up new security frameworks for spaceborne quantum communications systems.
- Score: 44.81834231082477
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: The security of prepare-and-measure satellite-based quantum key distribution
(QKD), under restricted eavesdropping scenarios, is addressed. We particularly
consider cases where the eavesdropper, Eve, has limited access to the
transmitted signal by Alice, and/or Bob's receiver station. This restriction is
modeled by lossy channels between Alice/Bob and Eve, where the transmissivity
of such channels can, in principle, be bounded by monitoring techniques. An
artefact of such lossy channels is the possibility of having {\it bypass}
channels, those which are not accessible to Eve, but may not necessarily be
characterized by the users either. This creates interesting, unexplored,
scenarios for analyzing QKD security. In this paper, we obtain generic bounds
on the key rate in the presence of bypass channels and apply them to
continuous-variable QKD protocols with Gaussian encoding with direct and
reverse reconciliation. We find regimes of operation in which the above
restrictions on Eve can considerably improve system performance. We also
develop customised bounds for several protocols in the BB84 family and show
that, in certain regimes, even the simple protocol of BB84 with weak coherent
pulses is able to offer positive key rates at high channel losses, which would
otherwise be impossible under an unrestricted Eve. In this case the limitation
on Eve would allow Alice to send signals with larger intensities than the
optimal value under an ideal Eve, which effectively reduces the effective
channel loss. In all these cases, the part of the transmitted signal that does
not reach Eve can play a non-trivial role in specifying the achievable key
rate. Our work opens up new security frameworks for spaceborne quantum
communications systems.
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