Device-independent quantum key distribution with arbitrarily small nonlocality
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2309.09650v3
- Date: Fri, 24 May 2024 09:43:15 GMT
- Title: Device-independent quantum key distribution with arbitrarily small nonlocality
- Authors: Lewis Wooltorton, Peter Brown, Roger Colbeck,
- Abstract summary: Device-independent quantum key distribution (DIQKD) allows two users to set up shared cryptographic key without the need to trust the quantum devices used.
Here we show that no such bound exists, giving schemes that achieve key with correlations arbitrarily close to the local set.
Some of our constructions achieve the maximum of 1 bit of key per pair of entangled qubits.
- Score: 0.8192907805418583
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Device-independent quantum key distribution (DIQKD) allows two users to set up shared cryptographic key without the need to trust the quantum devices used. Doing so requires nonlocal correlations between the users. However, in [Phys. Rev. Lett. 127, 050503 (2021)] it was shown that for known protocols nonlocality is not always sufficient, leading to the question of whether there is a fundamental lower bound on the minimum amount of nonlocality needed for any DIQKD implementation. Here we show that no such bound exists, giving schemes that achieve key with correlations arbitrarily close to the local set. Furthermore, some of our constructions achieve the maximum of 1 bit of key per pair of entangled qubits. We achieve this by studying a family of Bell-inequalities that constitute all self-tests of the maximally entangled state with a single linear Bell expression. Within this family there exist non-local correlations with the property that one pair of inputs yield outputs arbitrarily close to perfect key. Such correlations exist for a range of Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) values, including those arbitrarily close to the classical bound. Finally, we show the existence of quantum correlations that can generate both perfect key and perfect randomness simultaneously, whilst also displaying arbitrarily small CHSH violation; this opens up the possibility of a new class of cryptographic protocol.
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