314159 Posted July 20, 2007 Share Posted July 20, 2007 I realise this a is little bit of a basic question, but how does quantum cryptography from entanglement *work*? I mean, I know the general idea. Sharing a key without someone observing it, the two quanta to be observed having opposite but undetermined states, but what I mean is, in practice, how are the various steps carried out? Breaking it down: 1/ How does Alice actually go about creating her two entangled particles? 2/ How does she send one of them without them being observed? 3/ When sent (and this is the part I just don't get) what do she and bob actually do *exactly* to transmit the info? What would you measure in a real system, and what info would she send to bob on a classical channel? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bascule Posted July 20, 2007 Share Posted July 20, 2007 You might see my previous post on this matter, but here's a basic description: When blue light is pumped into a nonlinear crystal, entangled photon pairs (imaged here as a red beam with the aid of a diode laser) emerge at an angle of 3° to the blue beam, and the beams are sent into single-mode fibers to be detected. Because the entangled photons “know” each other, any interference will result in a mismatch when the two beams are compared. However, I've been quite curious about using a Bell test setup to produce a shared, streaming random pad. Once you have that you can use whatever OTP-based encryption methodology you like, and thus have provably unbreakable encryption. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
314159 Posted July 20, 2007 Author Share Posted July 20, 2007 I'd read your post previously, but I'm still left a litle confused. So you create entangled pairs of photons by passing the light through a non-linear crystal, but how does that actually create an entangled pair? I'm still left none the wiser on points 2/ and 3/, as to how the observations are carried out, and how they prevent any collapse of the states enroute. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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