Authentication of Quantum Messages
Howard Barnum, Claude Crepeau, Daniel Gottesman, Adam Smith, Alain, Tapp

TL;DR
This paper introduces a secure, non-interactive scheme for authenticating quantum messages using shared classical keys, establishing optimal key length and proving the impossibility of digital signatures for quantum states.
Contribution
It presents the first efficient protocol for quantum message authentication with unconditional security and demonstrates the fundamental link between authentication and encryption of quantum data.
Findings
Protocol achieves exponential decrease in failure probability
Key length is asymptotically optimal at 2m bits
Digital signatures for quantum states are impossible
Abstract
Authentication is a well-studied area of classical cryptography: a sender S and a receiver R sharing a classical private key want to exchange a classical message with the guarantee that the message has not been modified by any third party with control of the communication line. In this paper we define and investigate the authentication of messages composed of quantum states. Assuming S and R have access to an insecure quantum channel and share a private, classical random key, we provide a non-interactive scheme that enables S both to encrypt and to authenticate (with unconditional security) an m qubit message by encoding it into m+s qubits, where the failure probability decreases exponentially in the security parameter s. The classical private key is 2m+O(s) bits. To achieve this, we give a highly efficient protocol for testing the purity of shared EPR pairs. We also show that any…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
