Home // ICQNM 2014, The Eighth International Conference on Quantum, Nano/Bio, and Micro Technologies // View article
Self-Adaption of Quantum Key Distribution Devices to Changing Working Conditions
Authors:
Stefan Rass
Sandra König Safety & Security Department
Keywords: copula; estimation; quantum network; quantum de- vices; statistics
Abstract:
Quantum key distribution (QKD) draws security from the ability to detect eavesdroppers upon the incident of "unnaturally high" quantum bit error rates (QBER) during the protocol. This presumes that a working QKD device implementation needs to be calibrated with its own individual and characteristic channel noise that is observed in any case, especially when there is no eavesdropper. This natural noise level influences the idle QBER, and is in turn dependent on the device's working conditions. This work describes a statistical approach to construct a model that can be used to continuously compute the normal QBER, based on current (and changing) working conditions. The model is thus meant as a tool to refine the theoretical QBER threshold specific to the given QKD protocol, based on empirical data obtained under the given environmental conditions. More importantly, it allows the QKD-device to self-recalibrate under changing working conditions.
Pages: 1 to 7
Copyright: Copyright (c) IARIA, 2014
Publication date: November 16, 2014
Published in: conference
ISSN: 2308-3530
ISBN: 978-1-61208-380-3
Location: Lisbon, Portugal
Dates: from November 16, 2014 to November 20, 2014