
Showing posts with label quantum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quantum. Show all posts
Schrödinger's cat is a well-known paradox that applies the concept of superposition in quantum physics to objects encountered in everyday life. The idea is that a cat is placed in a sealed box with a radioactive source and a poison that will be triggered if an atom of the radioactive substance decays. Quantum physics suggests that the cat is both alive and dead (a superposition of states), until someone opens the box and, in doing so, changes the quantum state.
This hypothetical experiment, envisioned by one of the founding fathers of quantum mechanics in 1935, has found vivid analogies in laboratories in recent years. Scientists can now place a wave-packet of light composed of hundreds of particles simultaneously in two distinctly different states. Each state corresponds to an ordinary (classical) form of light abundant in nature.

A team of Yale scientists created a more exotic type of Schrödinger's cat-like state that has been proposed for experiments for more than 20 years. This cat lives or dies in two boxes at once, which is a marriage of the idea of Schrödinger's cat and another central concept of quantum physics: entanglement. Entanglement allows a local observation to change the state of a distant object instantaneously. Einstein once called it "spooky action at a distance," and in this case it allows a cat state to be distributed in different spatial modes.
The Yale team built a device consisting of two, 3D microwave cavities and an additional monitoring port -- all connected by a superconducting, artificial atom. The "cat" is made of confined microwave light in both cavities.
"This cat is big and smart. It doesn't stay in one box because the quantum state is shared between the two cavities and cannot be described separately," said Chen Wang, a postdoctoral associate at Yale and first author of a study in the journal Science, describing the research. "One can also take an alternative view, where we have two small and simple Schrodinger's cats, one in each box, that are entangled."
The research also has potential applications in quantum computation. A quantum computer would be able to solve certain problems much faster than classical computers by exploiting superposition and entanglement. Yet one of the main problems in developing a reliable quantum computer is how to correct for errors without disturbing the information.
"It turns out 'cat' states are a very effective approach to storing quantum information redundantly, for implementation of quantum error correction. Generating a cat in two boxes is the first step towards logical operation between two quantum bits in an error-correctible manner," said co-author Robert Schoelkopf, Sterling Professor of Applied Physics and Physics, and director of the Yale Quantum Institute.
Schoelkopf and his frequent collaborators, Michel Devoret and Steve Girvin, have pioneered the field of circuit quantum electrodynamics (cQED), providing one of the most widely used frameworks for quantum computation research. Devoret, Yale's F.W. Beinecke Professor of Physics, and Girvin, Yale's Eugene Higgins Professor of Physics and Applied Physics, are co-authors of the paper.
The research builds upon more than a decade of development in cQED architecture. The Yale team designed a variety of new features, including cylindrical 3D cavities with record quantum information storage time of more than 1 millisecond in superconducting circuits, and a measurement system that monitors certain aspects of a quantum state in a precise, non-destructive way. "We have combined quite a lot of recent technologies here," Wang said.
New quantum cryptologist angling hyper-entangled twisted light.
Quantum cryptology may be the hottest topic in security these days, but it sure reads like a lot of sci-fi jargon. But what does it mean?
Bruce Potter, CTO of the KEYW Corporation, defined it to a room full of privacy professionals this past July at the Black Hat conference. He explained that with so much concern regarding the quality of our protective encryption capabilities, this is still a complicated and misunderstood process. Quantum cryptology (and its crypto components) is a mind-bending concept that baffles even the most experienced scientists. Those who try to understand what’s going on are stymied by the diversity, age and code complexity of the various software components. And, while cryptographic core algorithms have been well-studied, other components in enterprise cryptosystems are less understood. It's no wonder this field of science incites so much controversy.
According to Toshiba, it means a stable, unbreakable encryption method that uses photons (or light particles) transferred through a custom-made, fiber-optic cable that's completely independent of the Internet. And, it's hack-proof because any attempts to eavesdrop (intercept, copy, wiretap, etc.) such a transmission alters the quantum state – that is, scrambles the encoded data – and is immediately detectable.
Hirokazu Tsukimoto, a spokesman at Toshiba, says quantum cryptographic communication uses quantum physics to ensure that genomic data encrypted with digital keys remains undisclosed. Bits are transmitted by individual photons, which cannot be manipulated without leaving remnants of the intrusion. "Toshiba has developed the world's fastest quantum key distribution prototype based on a self-differencing circuit for single photon detection," says Tsukimoto. "Field trials begin this month to evaluate the prototype for commercial use in five years. Further development includes large-scale quantum cryptography networks."
Meanwhile, however, other quantum cryptographic research is sprouting up in universities and corporations all over the planet. UCLA, MIT, Columbia, Duke, University of Maryland (UM), University of Rochester (UR), University of Glasgow (UG), National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), and Whitewood Encryption Systems (WES), to list some of the notable ones, are all working frantically to improve, perfect and expedite this technology.
Hyperentanglement
UCLA's engineering research team has discovered that photon pairs can be divided, then entangled into multiple dimensions by using the photons' energy and spin properties. Each additional dimension doubles the photon's data capacity, which means photon pairs can hold 32 times more data than they could using the standard quantum encoding methods.
"We show that an optical frequency comb can be generated at single photon level,” says Zhenda Xie, associate professor and research scientist at UCLA. "Essentially, we’re leveraging wavelength division multiplexing concepts at the quantum level."
"Our goal is to advance quantum hyperentanglement for high-speed, unbreakable, secure communications," says Chee Wei Wong, Sc.D., associate professor of electrical engineering. "This is an enhancement package to dramatically speed up the current Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) rate, so our breakthrough leverages on the current QKD technologies, some of which are already implemented and released."
Wong explains that this technology is currently only relevant for transmitting medical databases, finance trading and banking information, government database communications and military communications in the field and war theatre. In other words, UCLA's quantum hyperentanglement research is just for communications, not for protecting data files and records at the source, like all those databases that were recently breached.
"The next step for us," says Wong, "is to demonstrate even more quantum bits encoded in the hyperentanglement approach. Currently, each photon carries about five quantum bits, at about 2^5 = 32 (2 to the 5th power), which is 32 times higher than the current unbreakable data rates. As the next step, we would also like to see information encoding on our physical system. Yes, in the absence of a quantum computer, this quantum physics-based communication approach is known to be unbreakable."
Twisted light
A research team at the University of Rochester is working with Duke University and the University of Glasgow on another new technique. This one uses twisted light to enhance the data capacity of each photon. The current process uses one of the four polarization orientations (e.g., horizontal, vertical, diagonal and anti-diagonal), which yields only one qubit per photon.
University of Rochester PhD student Mohammad Mirhosseini and colleagues used the orbital angular momentum (OAM) of light and the azimuthal angular position (ANG) of photons to encode the qubits, which doubled the capacity to 2.05. Basically, light has energy defined by its frequency and momentum defined by its wavelength. The orbital angular momentum is the wavefront of a beam of light that's coiling around its propagation axis. The electric field spirals around like a corkscrew; hence, twisted light. The quantum number describes how sharp the spiral is, while the sign reveals the direction of the spiral.
Using the "twisted light" technology, the team encoded a seven-dimensional alphabet and confirmed that the new system can generate and detect information at 4 kHz speeds with 93 percent accuracy. According to Mirhosseini, future plans include enhancing the transmission rates to GHz levels for communications/telecom applications and to extend the encoding to 4.17 bits per photon.
Entropy engine
Whitewood Encryption Systems and Los Alamos National Laboratory are also collaborating on another area of quantum cryptology research and development: the Entropy Engine, which is a random number generator (RNG) that harvests entropy from a quantum field. LANL claims the RNG is so efficient, it can fit on a USB key drive at an exceptionally low cost.
"Security is a multi-faceted discipline representing multiple attack vectors and a constantly shifting set of targets for an agile and equipped attacker," says Richard Moulds, vice president of Product Strategy and Development at Whitewood Encryption Systems. "We believe that attacks against random number sources and key management systems are on the rise and represent a highly attractive target for would-be hackers."
According to Moulds, the Entropy Engine exploits quantum mechanics in an effort to provide pure entropy in the form of random data at high speeds (200 Mbps), and addresses the fundamental issue of all cryptosystems: predictability. Future plans include integrating this source of random data into a host of other applications. For example, Whitewood plans to expand its focus on a wider range of commercial and open-source or mainstream cryptographic applications.
"Our goal is to enable as broad a suite of applications as possible and take advantage of this high-quality, high-performance source of random data," says Moulds. "At the Black Hat show, Whitewood released an open-source plugin for OpenSSL to improve the monitoring and management of entropy consumption."
According to Wikipedia
Quantum cryptography is the use of quantum mechanical properties to perform cryptographic tasks. The best known example of quantum cryptography is quantum key distribution which provides a solution to the breaking of various popular public-key encryption and signature schemes (e.g., RSA and ElGamal). The advantage of quantum cryptography lies in the fact that it allows the completion of various cryptographic tasks that are proven or conjectured to be impossible using only classical (i.e. non-quantum) communication (see below for examples). For example, It is impossible to copy data encoded in a quantum state and the very act of reading data encoded in a quantum state changes the state. This is used to detect eavesdropping in quantum key distribution.
What is Cryptography??
Privacy is paramount when communicating sensitive information, and humans have invented some unusual ways to encode their conversations. In World War II, for example, the Nazis created a bulky machine called the Enigma that resembles a typewriter on steroids. This machine created one of the most difficult ciphers (encoded messages) of the pre-computer age.
Even after Polish resistance fighters made knockoffs of the machines -- complete with instructions on how the Enigma worked -- decoding messages was still a constant struggle for the Allies [source: Cambridge University]. As the codes were deciphered, however, the secrets yielded by the Enigma machine were so helpful that many historians have credited the code breaking as a important factor in the Allies' victory in the war.
What the Enigma machine was used for is called cryptology. This is the process of encoding (cryptography) and decoding (cryptoanalysis) information or messages (called plaintext). All of these processes combined are cryptology. Until the 1990s, cryptology was based on algorithms -- a mathematical process or procedure. These algorithms are used in conjunction with a key, a collection of bits (usually numbers). Without the proper key, it's virtually impossible to decipher an encoded message, even if you know what algorithm to use.
Everything you need to know about Quantum Cryptography... is a non-technical introduction to Quantum Cryptography. If you are interested to learn more about the way Quantum Cryptography works, follow the Quantum Key Distribution for Techies link.
— Quantum Cryptography or Quantum Key Distribution ?
I have heard about quantum cryptography and quantum key distribution. Is it the same thing?
Both terms describe the same technology. However the more accurate name is Quantum Key Distribution. This technology allows one to distribute sequence of random bit whose randomness and secrecy are guaranteed by the laws of quantum physics. These sequences can then be used as secret keys with conventional cryptography techniques to guarantee the confidentiality of data transmissions.
In the SwissQuantum network, the name Quantum Key Distribution — sometimes abbreviated as QKD — is preferred.
What advantage does QKD really bring in comparision to classical cryptographic techniques?
Cryptography offers — among other things — confidentiality of data transmissions. Before being transmitted, data is encrypted using an encryption algorithm (or process) and a secret key. After transmission, data is decrypted by reversing the encryption algorithm using the same secret key. The security of this scheme is based on the premise that the key is distributed only to the legitimate parties. This implies that the key transmission is a central problem (more information under Key Distribution).
Conventional cryptographic techniques rely on mathematical approaches to secure key transmission. However the security they offer is based on unproven assumptions and depends on the technology available to an eavesdropper.
Quantum Key Distribution is a technology that allows transmission of a sequence of random bits across an optical network and also verifies if this sequence was intercepted or not. This verification is based on the laws of quantum physics.
In practice, QKD is combined with conventional key distribution techniques (dual key agreement) to produce a key that is as secure as the strongest of the two original keys. With this approach, one can be sure to get the best of the classical and quantum world.
In summary, QKD provides long-term data transmission secrecy, which is not vulnerable to technological progress. On the contrary, classical cryptography provides secrecy only for a limited period of time.
QKD is a new technology and it exploits quantum physics. It is certainly complex to deploy and operate, isn’t it?
No, QKD is not complex to deploy. It has reached a level of maturity such that it only takes a typical network engineer a few minutes to install a QKD system. Moreover it can be managed using standard network administration tools.
In the SwissQuantum network, QKD equipments were deployed in less than a day, with most of the time spent in traffic jams whilst travelling from one site to the other.
Is QKD technology really so mature that commercial products already exist?
QKD products are available from at least two companies:
id Quantique’s QKD product was used in conjunction with layer 2 Ethernet encryption to secure elections in Geneva, in what is the world’s first application of QKD.
Other companies claim to offer or to be developing QKD products, but limited information is publicly available. It is however likely that the situation will evolve in the near future.
In what scenarios can QKD be used? What are the limitations of the technology?
QKD requires a direct optical channel — usually an optical fiber — between the emitter and the receiver. Standard optical fibers can be used. Contrary to a widespread misconception, it is not necessary to use a single fiber. Connections, splices and patching can be used.
Furthermore, QKD is also compatible with wavelength division multiplexing (WDM), although it does require more careful network design.
The only constraint is that no amplifiers are used on the optical fiber carrying the quantum signal. Such devices would perturb the communication in the same way an eavesdropper does. This implies in turn that the range of QKD is limited. Current commercial products can cover 100 km, while research prototypes were shown to work up to 250 km.
Due to the fact that it requires a direct optical link, QKD technology is inherently limited to point-to-point. However, it is possible — as demonstrated by the SwissQuantum project — to build a key management layer on top of QKD equipment to route and relay keys securely across meshed networks.
Overall QKD is perfectly compatible with the requirements of metropolitan area networks (MAN) communications. Applications include enterprise backbones and disaster recovery networks.
From time to time, I come across pieces of news that claim that QKD has been broken. Is it true?
Generally speaking, there are two conditions for a system to be secure:
- it must be based on sound principles
3.Contrary to classical key distribution techniques, which rely on unproven assumptions and thus do not fulfil the first criterion, the security of QKD is based on the laws of quantum physics and can be rigorously proven.
This having been said, it is then important to make sure that the practical embodiment of a QKD system also fulfils the second criterion and does not have any implementation flaws.
All the announcements about QKD having been cracked actually dealt with implementation flaws. These flaws are important but are inherent to any technological system.
In summary, the security of QKD is based on sound principles and, if properly implemented, it guarantees absolute security for key distribution.