English

Entanglement generation secure against general attacks

Quantum Physics 2017-11-20 v2

Abstract

We present a security proof for establishing private entanglement by means of recurrence-type entanglement distillation protocols over noisy quantum channels. We consider protocols where the local devices are imperfect, and show that nonetheless a confidential quantum channel can be established, and used to e.g. perform distributed quantum computation in a secure manner. While our results are not fully device independent (which we argue to be unachievable in settings with quantum outputs), our proof holds for arbitrary channel noise and noisy local operations, and even in the case where the eavesdropper learns the noise. Our approach relies on non-trivial properties of distillation protocols which are used in conjunction with de-Finetti and post-selection-type techniques to reduce a general quantum attack in a non-asymptotic scenario to an i.i.d. setting. As a side result, we also provide entanglement distillation protocols for non-i.i.d. input states.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1610.01907,
  title  = {Entanglement generation secure against general attacks},
  author = {Alexander Pirker and Vedran Dunjko and Wolfgang Dür and Hans J. Briegel},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1610.01907},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

10 pages + 31 pages supplementary material, 1 + 13 figures, V2: replaced with accepted version, improved presentation and results,