• DocumentCode
    74995
  • Title

    Full Security of Quantum Key Distribution From No-Signaling Constraints

  • Author

    Masanes, Lluis ; Renner, Renato ; Christandl, Matthias ; Winter, Andreas ; Barrett, John

  • Author_Institution
    H.H. Wills Phys. Lab., Univ. of Bristol, Bristol, UK
  • Volume
    60
  • Issue
    8
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Aug. 2014
  • Firstpage
    4973
  • Lastpage
    4986
  • Abstract
    We analyze a cryptographic protocol for generating a distributed secret key from correlations that violate a Bell inequality by a sufficient amount, and prove its security against eavesdroppers, constrained only by the assumption that any information accessible to them must be compatible with the non-signaling principle. The claim holds with respect to the state-of-the-art security definition used in cryptography, known as universally-composable security. The non-signaling assumption only refers to the statistics of measurement outcomes depending on the choices of measurements; hence security is independent of the internal workings of the devices - they do not even need to follow the laws of quantum theory. This is relevant for practice as a correct and complete modeling of realistic devices is generally impossible. The techniques developed are general and can be applied to other Bell inequality-based protocols. In particular, we provide a scheme for estimating Bell-inequality violations when the samples are not independent and identically distributed.
  • Keywords
    Bell theorem; cryptographic protocols; private key cryptography; quantum cryptography; statistical analysis; telecommunication security; Bell inequality-based protocols; Bell-inequality violation estimation; cryptographic protocol; cryptography; distributed secret key generation; eavesdropper; measurement outcome statistic; no-signaling constraints; nonsignaling principle; quantum key distribution security; state-of-the-art security definition; universally-composable security; Correlation; Probability distribution; Protocols; Quantum entanglement; Random variables; Security; Quantum mechanics; cryptographic protocols; cryptography; quantum entanglement; random number generation;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9448
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TIT.2014.2329417
  • Filename
    6846344