2
talks
0
committee roles
0
leadership roles
2023–2023
years active
Contributions
QIP QCrypt TQC presenter award · △program ◇steering ○organising □local · filled = chair
Talks
| Title | Conference | Type | Co-authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Experimental cheat-sensitive quantum weak coin flipping | QCRYPT 2023 | regular | Verena Yacoub, Ulysse Chabaud, Mathieu Bozzio, Iordanis Kerenidis, Eleni Diamanti |
As in modern communication networks, the security of quantum networks will rely on complex cryptographic tasks that are based on a handful of fundamental primitives. Weak coin flipping (WCF) is a significant such primitive which allows two mistrustful parties to agree on a random bit while they favor opposite outcomes. Remarkably, perfect information-theoretic security can be achieved in principle for quantum WCF, which is impossible for a classical coin flip without computational assumptions or trusting a third party. In this work, we overcome conceptual and practical issues that have prevented the experimental demonstration of this primitive to date, and demonstrate how quantum resources can provide cheat sensitivity, whereby each party can detect a cheating opponent, and an honest party is never sanctioned. Such a property is not known to be classically achievable with information-theoretic security. Our experiment implements a refined, loss-tolerant version of a recently proposed theoretical protocol and exploits heralded single photons generated by spontaneous parametric down-conversion, a carefully optimized linear optical interferometer including beam splitters with variable reflectivities and a fast optical switch for the verification step. High values of our protocol benchmarks are maintained for attenuation corresponding to several kilometers of telecom optical fiber. |
|||
| Experimental Certification of Quantum Transmission via Bell's Theorem | QCRYPT 2023 | regular ▸ presenter | Laura dos Santos Martins, Verena Yacoub, Pascal Lefebvre, Ivan Supic, Damian Markham, Eleni Diamanti |
Quantum transmission links are central elements in essentially all implementations of quantum information protocols. Emerging progress in quantum technologies involving such links needs to be accompanied by appropriate certification tools. In adversarial scenarios, a certification method can be vulnerable to attacks if too much trust is placed on the underlying system. Here, we propose a protocol in a device independent framework, which allows for the certification of practical quantum transmission links in scenarios where minimal assumptions are made about the functioning of the certification setup. We take in particular unavoidable transmission losses into account by modeling the link as a completely-positive trace-decreasing map. We also crucially remove the assumption of independent and identically distributed samples, which is known to be incompatible with adversarial settings. Finally, in view of the use of the certified transmitted states for follow-up applications, our protocol allows to estimate the quality of the state and does not certify the channel only. To illustrate the practical relevance and the feasibility of our protocol with currently available technology we provide an experimental implementation based on a state-of-the-art polarization entangled photon pair source in a Sagnac configuration and analyse its robustness for realistic losses and errors. |
|||
Collaborators
| Co-author | Joint talks |
|---|---|
| Eleni Diamanti | 2 |
| Verena Yacoub | 2 |
| Damian Markham | 1 |
| Iordanis Kerenidis | 1 |
| Ivan Supic | 1 |
| Laura dos Santos Martins | 1 |
| Mathieu Bozzio | 1 |
| Pascal Lefebvre | 1 |
| Ulysse Chabaud | 1 |