TL;DR
This paper investigates the limits of quantum communication over free-space optical channels under moderate-to-strong turbulence, demonstrating the feasibility of secure key distribution in challenging atmospheric conditions.
Contribution
It extends the analysis of quantum communication to more turbulent regimes, providing rigorous limits and showing that secure CV-QKD is possible in these conditions.
Findings
Composable keys can be extracted despite turbulence effects.
Quantum communication performance is characterized in moderate-to-strong turbulence.
The study applies to long-distance ground links and satellite downlinks.
Abstract
Since the invention of the laser in the 60s, one of the most fundamental communication channels has been the free-space optical channel. For this type of channel, a number of effects generally need to be considered, including diffraction, refraction, atmospheric extinction, pointing errors and, most importantly, turbulence. Because of all these adverse features, the free-space optical (FSO) channel is more difficult to study than a stable fiber-based link. For the same reasons, only recently it has been possible to establish the ultimate performances achievable in quantum communications via free-space channels, together with practical rates for continuous variable (CV) quantum key distribution (QKD). Differently from previous literature, mainly focused on the regime of weak turbulence, this work considers the FSO channel in the more challenging regime of moderate-to-strong turbulence,…
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