Quantum Brain
← Back to papers

Eve's forgery probability from her false acceptance probability: interactive authentication, Holevo information and the min-entropy

Pete Rigas·February 26, 2026
Quantum Physicsmath.PR

AI Breakdown

Get a structured breakdown of this paper — what it's about, the core idea, and key takeaways for the field.

Abstract

We obtain estimates for Eve's forgery probability, namely the probability that she is able to forge a message which Alice or Bob mistakenly accept over a noisy Quantum channel for generating a shared Quantum secret key. This probability is related to Eve's success probability obtained in a previous work due to Renner and Wolf, which was obtained from assumptions on the min-entropy for characterizing asymmetric security. To demonstrate that protocols over noisy Quantum channels are dependent upon a single, unified security threshold in comparison to multiple security parameters in the Renner-Wolf interactive authentication protocol framework we upper bound Eve's forgery probability with a Holevo-type quantity that can be made negligibly small. By leveraging estimates for Eve's false acceptance probability that have previously been obtained by the author, we obtain the desired security threshold by bounding the false acceptance probability with a suitably chosen two-universal function which serves as a counterpart to two-universal hashing functions that have previously been examined for cryptographic protocols in Quantum key distribution. As a result the protocol is not only $ε$-secure, for some $ε>0$, but also composable against forgery and key leakage.

Related Research

Quantum Intelligence

Ask about quantum research, companies, or market developments.