Researchers unite to distribute quantum keys
Researchers from across Europe have united to build the largest quantum key distribution network ever built. The efforts of 41 research and industrial organisations were realised as secure, quantum encrypted information was sent over an eight node, mesh network. With an average link length of 20 to 30 kilometres, and the longest link being 83 kilometres, the researchers from organisations such as the AIT Austrian Institute of Technology (formerly Austrian Research Centers), id Quantique, Toshiba Research in the UK, Université de Genève, the University of Vienna, CNRS, Thales, LMU Munich, Siemens, and many more have broken all previous records and taken another huge stride towards practical implementation of secure, quantum-encrypted communication networks.
A journal paper, 'The SECOQC Key Distribution Network in Vienna', published as part of IOP Publishing's New Journal of Physics' Focus Issue on 'Quantum Cryptography: Theory and Practice', illustrates the operation of the network and gives an initial estimate for transmission capacity (the maximum amount of keys that can be exchanged on a quantum key distribution, QKD, network).
Undertaken in late 2008, using the company internal glass fibre ring of Siemens and 4 of its dependencies across Vienna plus a repeater station, near St. Pölten in Lower Austria, the QKD demonstration involved secure telephone communication and video-conference as well as a rerouting experiment which demonstrated the functionality of the SEcure COmmunication network based on Quantum Cryptography (SECOQC).
One of the first practical applications to emerge from advances in the sometimes baffling study of quantum mechanics, quantum cryptography has become a soon-to-be reached benchmark in secure communications.
Quantum mechanics describes the fundamental nature of matter at the atomic level and offers very intriguing, often counter-intuitive, explanations to help us understand the building blocks that construct the world around us. Quantum cryptography uses the quantum mechanical behaviour of photons, the fundamental particles of light, to enable highly secure transmission of data beyond that achievable by classical methods.
The photons themselves are used to distribute cryptographic key to access encrypted information, such as a highly sensitive transaction file that, say, a bank wishes to keep completely confidential, which can be sent along practical communication lines, made of fibre optics. Quantum indeterminacy, the quantum mechanics dictum which states that measuring an unknown quantum state will change it, means that the information cannot be accessed by a third party without corrupting it beyond recovery and therefore making the act of hacking futile.
The researchers write, "In our paper we have put forward, for the first time, a systematic design that allows unrestricted scalability and interoperability of QKD technologies."
Source: Institute of Physics
Related
- New record for information storage and retrieval lifetime advances quantum networksSun, 7 Dec 2008, 13:36:49 EST
- 2 for 1: NIST design enables more cost-effective quantum key distributionThu, 29 May 2008, 12:21:46 EDT
- Field experiment on a robust hierarchical metropolitan quantum cryptography networkFri, 16 Oct 2009, 1:07:44 EDT
- Light touch: Controlling the behavior of quantum dotsTue, 19 Aug 2008, 17:56:36 EDT
- Quantum memory and turbulence in ultra-cold atomsMon, 20 Jul 2009, 0:42:15 EDT
Other sources
- Europe builds largest quantum key networkfrom UPIThu, 2 Jul 2009, 10:14:07 EDT
- Quantum Encrypted Information Sent Over An Eight Node, Mesh Networkfrom Science DailyThu, 2 Jul 2009, 9:35:17 EDT
- Researchers unite to distribute quantum keysfrom Science CentricThu, 2 Jul 2009, 7:14:09 EDT
- Researchers unite to distribute quantum keysfrom PhysorgThu, 2 Jul 2009, 7:07:07 EDT
- Researchers unite to distribute quantum keysfrom Science BlogThu, 2 Jul 2009, 1:35:13 EDT
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox!Learn more about
Popular science news articles
- Higher carotid arterial stenting rates associated with poorer clinical outcomes
- AIBS publishes Darwin articles open access
- Ants are friendly to some trees, but not others
- Prevention experts urge modification to 2009 H1N1 guidance for health care workers
- US and European experts applaud new transatlantic task force on antibiotic resistance threat
- African desert rift confirmed as new ocean in the making
- Wolves, moose and biodiversity: An unexpected connection
- Why nice guys usually get the girls
- Does green tea prevent cancer? Evidence continues to brew, but questions remain
- Digital 'plaster' for monitoring vital signs undergoes first clinical trials
- African desert rift confirmed as new ocean in the making
- 1 shot of gene therapy and children with congenital blindness can now see
- Cleanliness is next to godliness: New research shows clean smells promote moral behavior
- Scientists discover influenza's Achilles heel: Antioxidants
- How the Moon produces its own water
No popular news yet
- African desert rift confirmed as new ocean in the making
- Study reveals a 'missing link' in immune response to disease
- Common plants can eliminate indoor air pollutants
- Reduction in glycotoxins from heat-processing of foods reduces risk of chronic disease
- Does green tea prevent cancer? Evidence continues to brew, but questions remain
- Scientists discover influenza's Achilles heel: Antioxidants
- African desert rift confirmed as new ocean in the making
- 1 shot of gene therapy and children with congenital blindness can now see
- Alzheimer's researchers find high protein diet shrinks brain
- Neuroscience 2009 highlights new research on exercise, music and the brain