Passive polarization-encoded BB84 protocol using a heralded single-photon source

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dc.contributor.author Rani, Anju
dc.contributor.author Mongia, Vardaan
dc.contributor.author Parvatikar, Parvatesh
dc.contributor.author Gharate, Rutuj
dc.contributor.author Sharma, Tanya
dc.contributor.author Ramakrishnan, Jayanth
dc.contributor.author Chandravanshi, Pooja
dc.contributor.author Singh, R. P.
dc.coverage.spatial United States of America
dc.date.accessioned 2024-12-12T05:11:32Z
dc.date.available 2024-12-12T05:11:32Z
dc.date.issued 2024-12
dc.identifier.citation Rani, Anju; Mongia, Vardaan; Parvatikar, Parvatesh; Gharate, Rutuj; Sharma, Tanya; Ramakrishnan, Jayanth; Chandravanshi, Pooja and Singh, R. P., "Passive polarization-encoded BB84 protocol using a heralded single-photon source", arXiv, Cornell University Library, DOI: arXiv:2412.02944, Dec. 2024.
dc.identifier.uri http://arxiv.org/abs/2412.02944
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.iitgn.ac.in/handle/123456789/10840
dc.description.abstract The BB84 quantum key distribution protocol set the foundation for achieving secure quantum communication. Since its inception, significant advancements have aimed to overcome experimental challenges and enhance security. In this paper, we report the implementation of a passive polarization-encoded BB84 protocol using a heralded single-photon source. By passively and randomly encoding polarization states with beam splitters and half-wave plates, the setup avoids active modulation, simplifying design and enhancing security against side-channel attacks. The heralded single-photon source ensures a low probability of multi-photon emissions, eliminating the need for decoy states and mitigating photon number splitting vulnerabilities. The quality of the single-photon source is certified by measuring the second-order correlation function at zero delay, g2(0)=0.0408±0.0008, confirming a very low probability of multi-photon events. Compared to conventional BB84 or BBM92 protocols, our protocol provides optimized resource trade-offs, with fewer detectors (compared to BBM92) and no reliance on external quantum random number generators (compared to typical BB84) to drive Alice's encoding scheme. Our implementation achieved a quantum bit error rate of 7% and a secure key rate of 5 kbps. These results underscore the practical, secure, and resource-efficient framework our protocol offers for scalable quantum communication technologies.
dc.description.statementofresponsibility by Anju Rani, Vardaan Mongia, Parvatesh Parvatikar, Rutuj Gharate, Tanya Sharma, Jayanth Ramakrishnan, Pooja Chandravanshi and R. P. Singh
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.publisher Cornell University Library
dc.title Passive polarization-encoded BB84 protocol using a heralded single-photon source
dc.type Article
dc.relation.journal arXiv


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