Micius, the world's first quantum communication satellite, was hackable
Alexander Miller

TL;DR
This paper reveals that the quantum communication satellite Micius is vulnerable to side-channel attacks due to distinguishability of laser pulses, compromising the security of its quantum key distribution system.
Contribution
The study provides a detailed analysis of laser pulse timing mismatches on Micius, exposing a security loophole in its quantum communication protocol.
Findings
Significant timing delays found between laser diodes exceeding 100 ps.
Laser pulse distinguishability allows eavesdroppers to identify decoy and signal states with 98.7% accuracy.
Timing mismatches pose a security risk to satellite-based quantum key distribution.
Abstract
The decoy-state BB84 protocol for quantum key distribution (QKD) is used on Micius, the world's first satellite for quantum communications. The method of decoy states can detect photon-number-splitting eavesdropping and thus enables, in theory, secure QKD using weak coherent pulses over long distances with high channel loss inherent in satellite communication systems. However, it is widely known that realistic QKD devices can be vulnerable to various types of side-channel attacks that rely on flaws in experimental implementation. In most free-space QKD systems, including that on board Micius, multiple semiconductor lasers with passive optics are utilized to randomly generate polarization states. Optical pulses from independent laser diodes can to some extent differ in their temporal, spectral, and/or spatial distribution, and the quantum states can thus be distinguishable. Such…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Optical Wireless Communication Technologies · Advanced Frequency and Time Standards
