This protocol gives us the highest possible degree of security at very high clock rates.
- Lucian Comandar
Researchers have developed a new method to overcome one of the main issues in implementing a quantum cryptography system, raising the prospect of a useable ‘unbreakable’ method for sending sensitive information hidden inside particles of light.
By ‘seeding’ one laser beam inside another, the researchers, from the University of Cambridge and Toshiba Research Europe, have demonstrated that it is possible to distribute encryption keys at rates between two and six orders of magnitude higher than earlier attempts at a real-world quantum cryptography system. The results are reported in the journal Nature Photonics.
Encryption is a vital part of modern life, enabling sensitive information to be shared securely. In conventional cryptography, the sender and receiver of a particular piece of information decide the encryption code, or key, up front, so that only those with the key can decrypt the information. But as computers get faster and more powerful, encryption codes get easier to break.
Quantum cryptography promises ‘unbreakable’ security by hiding information in particles of light, or photons, emitted from lasers. In this form of cryptography, quantum mechanics are used to randomly generate a key. The sender, who is normally designated as Alice, sends the key via polarised photons, which are sent in different directions. The receiver, normally designated as Bob, uses photon detectors to measure which direction the photons are polarised, and the detectors translate the photons into bits, which, assuming Bob has used the correct photon detectors in the correct order, will give him the key.
The strength of quantum cryptography is that if an attacker tries to intercept Alice and Bob’s message, the key itself changes, due to the properties of quantum mechanics. Since it was first proposed in the 1980s, quantum cryptography has promised the possibility of unbreakable security. “In theory, the attacker could have all of the power possible under the laws of physics, but they still wouldn’t be able to crack the code,” said the paper’s first author Lucian Comandar, a PhD student at Cambridge’s Department of Engineering and Toshiba’s Cambridge Research Laboratory.
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Image: Depiction of indistinguishable photons leaving through the same output port of a beam splitter
Credit: Lucian Comandar
Reproduced courtesy of the University of Cambridge
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