English

Controlling an actively-quenched single photon detector with bright light

Quantum Physics 2011-11-08 v4 Instrumentation and Detectors

Abstract

We control using bright light an actively-quenched avalanche single-photon detector. Actively-quenched detectors are commonly used for quantum key distribution (QKD) in the visible and near-infrared range. This study shows that these detectors are controllable by the same attack used to hack passively-quenched and gated detectors. This demonstrates the generality of our attack and its possible applicability to eavsdropping the full secret key of all QKD systems using avalanche photodiodes (APDs). Moreover, the commercial detector model we tested (PerkinElmer SPCM-AQR) exhibits two new blinding mechanisms in addition to the previously observed thermal blinding of the APD, namely: malfunctioning of the bias voltage control circuit, and overload of the DC/DC converter biasing the APD. These two new technical loopholes found just in one detector model suggest that this problem must be solved in general, by incorporating generally imperfect detectors into the security proof for QKD.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0809.3408,
  title  = {Controlling an actively-quenched single photon detector with bright light},
  author = {Sebastien Sauge and Lars Lydersen and Andrey Anisimov and Johannes Skaar and Vadim Makarov},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0809.3408},
  year   = {2011}
}

Comments

Expanded discussions, updated references, added a picture of decapsulated APD, reformatted to single-column style. Accepted to Opt. Express. 11 pages, 6 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:22:13.996Z