Quantum Keyless Privacy vs. Quantum Key Distribution for Space Links
A. Vazquez-Castro, D. Rusca, H. Zbinden

TL;DR
This paper compares quantum keyless private communication with quantum key distribution for space links, demonstrating higher secure rates and daytime operation feasibility for keyless methods in satellite communications.
Contribution
It introduces a practical quantum keyless privacy scheme for space links, showing advantages over QKD in rate, noise sensitivity, and daytime operation, based on the wiretap channel model.
Findings
Higher secure communication rates than QKD for LEO satellites
Keyless privacy is less sensitive to noise and allows daytime operation
Numerical results align with recent satellite experiments
Abstract
We study information theoretical security for space links between a satellite and a ground-station. Quantum key distribution (QKD) is a well established method for information theoretical secure communication, giving the eavesdropper unlimited access to the channel and technological resources only limited by the laws of quantum physics. But QKD for space links is extremely challenging, the achieved key rates are extremely low, and day-time operating impossible. However, eavesdropping on a channel in free-space without being noticed seems complicated, given the constraints imposed by orbital mechanics. If we also exclude eavesdropper's presence in a given area around the emitter and receiver, we can guarantee that he has only access to a fraction of the optical signal. In this setting, quantum keyless private (direct) communication based on the wiretap channel model is a valid…
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