Quantum time transfer: a practical method for lossy and noisy channels
Randy Lafler, R. Nicholas Lanning

TL;DR
This paper presents a quantum time transfer method using biphoton sources that achieves picosecond timing precision over lossy, noisy channels, suitable for space-Earth quantum networks and secure timing in GPS-denied environments.
Contribution
It introduces a quantum time transfer technique based on biphoton sources that maintains high precision under adverse channel conditions, advancing quantum networking capabilities.
Findings
Achieves picosecond-level timing precision in high-loss, high-noise channels.
Suitable for daytime space-Earth quantum communication.
Provides secure, covert timing transfer using quantum phenomena.
Abstract
Timing requirements for long-range quantum networking are driven by the necessity of synchronizing the arrival of photons, from independent sources, for Bell-state measurements. Thus, characteristics such as repetition rate and pulse duration influence the precision required to enable quantum networking tasks such as teleportation and entanglement swapping. Some solutions have been proposed utilizing classical laser pulses, frequency combs, and biphoton sources. In this article, we explore the utility of the latter method since it is based upon quantum phenomena, which makes it naturally covert, and potentially quantum secure. Furthermore, it can utilize relatively low performance quantum-photon sources and detection equipment, but provides picosecond-level timing precision even under high loss and high noise channel conditions representative of daytime space-Earth links. Therefore,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum optics and atomic interactions · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography
