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Hong-Ou-Mandel test to verify indistinguishability of the states emitted from a quantum key distribution transmitter implementing decoy Bennett-Brassard 1984 protocol

Toshiya Tajima, Akihisa Tomita, Atsushi Okamoto·March 27, 2026
Quantum Physics

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Abstract

Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) systems require rigorous verification of device properties to ensure implementation security. A critical requirement is the indistinguishability of transmitted pulses encoded by different modulation patterns, as distinguishability through non-encoded degrees of freedom could enable undetected eavesdropping. We present a practical method for testing pulse indistinguishability in QKD transmitters based on Hong-Ou-Mandel (HOM) interference. We establish the theoretical equivalence between the SWAP test and HOM measurement for characterizing quantum state fidelity, demonstrating that HOM visibility directly relates to the trace of density matrix products for phase-randomized weak coherent pulses. We experimentally validated this approach using a high-speed QKD transmitter implementing the decoy BB84 protocol with time-bin encoding at 1.25 GHz. HOM interference was measured between adjacent pulses prepared in different Bennett-Brassard 1984 states (X0, X1, Y0, Y1) using superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors. The observed HOM visibility was approximately 0.3 across all state combinations, with no statistically significant differences detected. These results confirm that modulation does not compromise pulse indistinguishability in our transmitter. The HOM test provides a practical, quantum-optical method for security certification of QKD systems without requiring assumptions about specific degrees of freedom, using only standard fiber-optic components and single-photon detectors.

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