Experimental quantum key distribution with simulated ground-to-satellite photon losses and processing limitations
Jean-Philippe Bourgoin, Nikolay Gigov, Brendon L. Higgins, Zhizhong, Yan, Evan Meyer-Scott, Amir K. Khandani, Norbert L\"utkenhaus, and Thomas, Jennewein

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the feasibility of satellite-based quantum key distribution under high photon loss conditions using minimal hardware, showing secure key generation in simulated low-Earth orbit scenarios.
Contribution
It introduces a practical implementation of QKD with full post-processing in high-loss regimes using limited satellite hardware, including finite-size analysis and multi-pass key extraction strategies.
Findings
Secure key bits up to 56.5 dB photon loss achieved
Secure key generated from simulated low-Earth-orbit passes
Combining multiple passes enhances key extraction capability
Abstract
Quantum key distribution (QKD) has the potential to improve communications security by offering cryptographic keys whose security relies on the fundamental properties of quantum physics. The use of a trusted quantum receiver on an orbiting satellite is the most practical near-term solution to the challenge of achieving long-distance (global-scale) QKD, currently limited to a few hundred kilometers on the ground. This scenario presents unique challenges, such as high photon losses and restricted classical data transmission and processing power due to the limitations of a typical satellite platform. Here we demonstrate the feasibility of such a system by implementing a QKD protocol, with optical transmission and full post-processing, in the high-loss regime using minimized computing hardware at the receiver. Employing weak coherent pulses with decoy states, we demonstrate the production…
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