Polarization correction towards satellite-based QKD without an active feedback
Sourav Chatterjee, Kaumudibikash Goswami, Rishab Chatterjee, Urbasi, Sinha

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel polarization correction method for satellite-based QKD that eliminates the need for active feedback by using state tomography and optimal measurement bases, demonstrated with an entangled photon experiment.
Contribution
It proposes a feedback-free polarization correction technique for QKD using state tomography and optimal measurement bases, enhancing robustness over optical fibers and atmospheric channels.
Findings
Achieved 94% fidelity and 0.92 concurrence in entangled photon pairs.
Demonstrated a QBER of approximately 5% and a key rate of 35 Kbps.
Protocol performance remains stable despite local polarization rotations.
Abstract
Quantum key distribution (QKD) is a cryptographic protocol to enable two parties to share a secure key string, which can be used in one-time pad cryptosystem. There has been an ongoing surge of interest in implementing long-haul photonic-implementation of QKD protocols. However, the endeavour is challenging in many aspects. In particular, one of the major challenges is the polarization degree of freedom of single-photons getting affected while transmission through optical fibres, or atmospheric turbulence. Conventionally, an active feedback-based mechanism is employed to achieve real-time polarization tracking. In this work, we propose an alternative approach where we first perform a state tomography to reconstruct the output density matrix. We then evaluate the optimal measurement bases at Bob's end that leads to the maximum (anti-)correlation in the measurement outcomes of both…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Orbital Angular Momentum in Optics
