Abstract
Complete security proofs for quantum communication protocols can be notoriously involved, which convolutes their verification, and obfuscates the key physical insights the security finally relies on. In such cases, for the majority of the community, the utility of such proofs may be restricted. Here, we provide a simple proof of confidentiality for parallel quantum channels established via entanglement distillation based on hashing, in the presence of noise, and a malicious eavesdropper who is restricted only by the laws of quantum mechanics. The direct contribution lies in improving the linear confidentiality levels of recurrence-type entanglement distillation protocols to exponential levels for hashing protocols. The proof directly exploits the security relevant physical properties: measurement-based quantum computation with resource states and the separation of Bell-pairs from an eavesdropper. The proof also holds for situations where Eve has full control over the input states, and obtains all information about the operations and noise applied by the parties. The resulting state after hashing is private, i.e. disentangled from the eavesdropper. Moreover, the noise regimes for entanglement distillation and confidentiality do not coincide: confidentiality can be guaranteed even in situations where entanglement distillation fails. We extend our results to multiparty situations which are of special interest for secure quantum networks.
Highlights
Secure and private quantum communication is a concept of fundamental importance for emerging quantum technologies
Due to the simplicity of the confidentiality proof we clearly identify the relevant elements of physical properties from which the formal claim follows: the purity of the target state for noiseless entanglement distillation protocols and the way one deals with noise in measurement-based quantum computation (MBQC) with resource states
In summary we have analytically shown that noisy measurement-based implementations of bi- and multipartite hashing protocols establish exponential confidentiality levels
Summary
Such cases, for the majority of the community, the utility of such proofs may be restricted. We provide a simple proof of confidentiality for parallel quantum channels established via entanglement distillation based on hashing, in the presence of noise, and a malicious eavesdropper who is restricted only by the laws of quantum mechanics. The proof directly exploits the security relevant physical properties: measurementbased quantum computation with resource states and the separation of Bell-pairs from an eavesdropper. The resulting state after hashing is private, i.e. disentangled from the eavesdropper. We extend our results to multiparty situations which are of special interest for secure quantum networks
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