The BB84 quantum key distribution using conjugate homodyne detection
Bing Qi

TL;DR
This paper investigates a novel approach to quantum key distribution using conjugate homodyne detection in a photon counting mode, potentially expanding the toolkit for secure quantum communication beyond traditional methods.
Contribution
It introduces a new QKD protocol based on conjugate homodyne detection, analyzing its security and performance through numerical simulations.
Findings
Conjugate homodyne detection can be used for QKD with security advantages.
Vacuum fluctuation noise is immune to external manipulation.
The protocol shows promising performance in numerical security evaluations.
Abstract
Optical homodyne detection has been widely used in continuous-variable (CV) quantum information processing for measuring field quadrature values. In this paper we explore the possibility of operating a conjugate homodyne detection system in "photon counting" mode to implement discrete-variable (DV) quantum key distribution (QKD) protocols. A conjugate homodyne detection system, which consists of a beam splitter followed by two optical homodyne detectors, can simultaneously measure a pair of conjugate quadratures X and P of the incoming quantum state. In classical electrodynamics, X^2 + P^2 is proportional to the energy (the photon number) of the input light. In quantum optics, X and P do not commute and thus the above photon-number measurement is intrinsically noisy. This suggests that a blind application of the standard security proof could result pessimistic QKD performance. We…
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