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Quantum enigma machine: Experimentally demonstrating quantum data locking.

Daniel J. Lum, J. Howell, M. S. Allman, T. Gerrits, V. Verma, S. Nam, C. Lupo, S. Lloyd·May 20, 2016·DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.94.022315
PhysicsMedicineComputer Science

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Abstract

Shannon proved in 1949 that information-theoretic-secure encryption is possible if the encryption key is used only once, is random, and is at least as long as the message itself. Notwithstanding, when information is encoded in a quantum system, the phenomenon of quantum data locking allows one to encrypt a message with a shorter key and still provide information-theoretic security. We present one of the first feasible experimental demonstrations of quantum data locking for direct communication and propose a scheme for a quantum enigma machine that encrypts 6 bits per photon (containing messages, new encryption keys, and forward error correction bits) with less than 6 bits per photon of encryption key while remaining information-theoretically secure.

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