DocumentCode
2568367
Title
Quantum cryptography for secure satellite communications
Author
Hughes, Richard J. ; Buttler, William T. ; Kwiat, Paul G. ; Lamoreuax, S.K. ; Morgan, G.L. ; Nordholt, Jane E. ; Peterson, Charles G.
Author_Institution
Los Alamos Nat. Lab., NM, USA
Volume
1
fYear
2000
fDate
2000
Firstpage
191
Abstract
Quantum cryptography is an emerging technology in which two parties may simultaneously generate shared, secret cryptographic key material using the transmission of quantum states of light. The security of these transmissions is based on the inviolability of the laws of quantum mechanics and information-theoretically secure post-processing methods. An adversary can neither successfully tap the quantum transmissions, nor evade detection, owing to Heisenberg´s uncertainty principle. In this paper we describe the theory of quantum cryptography, and recent results from our experimental free-space system with which we have demonstrated the feasibility of quantum key generation over a point-to-point outdoor atmospheric path in daylight. We achieved a transmission distance of 0.5 km, which was limited only by the length of the test range. Our results provide strong evidence that cryptographic key material could be generated on demand between a ground station and a satellite (or between two satellites), allowing a satellite to be securely re-keyed on orbit for encrypting the uplinked command path and downlinked data path; or to distribute keys between widely-separated ground stations with a satellite relay, enabling encrypted communications over even inter-continental distances. We present a feasibility analysis of surface-to-satellite quantum key generation
Keywords
optical links; quantum cryptography; satellite communication; telecommunication security; Heisenberg uncertainty principle; daylight; feasibility analysis; free-space system; information-theoretically secure post-processing methods; light quantum state transmission; point-to-point outdoor atmospheric path; quantum cryptography; secure satellite communications; shared secret cryptographic key; surface-to-satellite quantum key generation; Artificial satellites; Cryptography; Information security; Protective relaying; Quantum mechanics; Relays; Satellite communication; Satellite ground stations; Testing; Uncertainty;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Aerospace Conference Proceedings, 2000 IEEE
Conference_Location
Big Sky, MT
ISSN
1095-323X
Print_ISBN
0-7803-5846-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/AERO.2000.879387
Filename
879387
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