Group:QUIC meeting
Title:Practical measurement-device-independent quantum key distribution: theory and ex
Speaker: Feihu Xu University of Toronto
Time: 2013-07-02 15:30-2013-07-02 16:30
Venue:FIT-1-222
Abstract:
Quantum cryptography or quantum key distribution (QKD) can provide unconditional (i.e. information-theoretic) security based on the laws of quantum physics. It has been identified as the first technology in quantum information science to reach practical applications. During the past decade, commercial QKD products have appeared in the market; various field-test QKD networks have already been built in the USA, Europe, China, and Japan. However, owing to the imperfections in real-life implementations of QKD, a large gap between its theory and practice remains unfilled. In
particular, an eavesdropper may exploit these imperfections and launch quantum hacking not covered by the original security proofs of QKD. In this presentation, I will firstly review the recent developments of the field and discuss the quantum hacking activities by using some well-known quantum attacks for illustration. Then, I will present a novel countermeasure scheme, namely measure- device-independent QKD (MDI-QKD), which removes all attacks in the detection system, the most serious loophole of QKD implementations. Most importantly, I will show how to practically implement MDI-QKD, including a finite decoy-state method, a finite-key analysis and a polarization-encoding experimental demonstration.
Short Bio: