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By Roland Pease
BBC Radio Science Unit
Perfect secrecy has come a step closer with the launch of the world's first
computer network protected by unbreakable quantum encryption at a scientific
conference in Vienna.
The network connects six locations across Vienna and in the nearby town of St
Poelten, using 200 km of standard commercial fibre optic cables.
Quantum cryptography is completely different from the kinds of security schemes
used on computer networks today.
These are typically based on complex mathematical procedures which are
extremely hard for outsiders to crack but not impossible given sufficient
computing resources or time.
But quantum systems use the laws of quantum theory, which have been shown to be
inherently unbreakable.
Real breakthroughs are not found because you want to develop some new
technology, but because you are curious and want to find out how the world is
Anton Zeilinger, Vienna University
The basic idea of quantum cryptography was worked out 25 years ago by Charles
Bennett of IBM and Gilles Brassard of Montreal University, who was in Vienna to
see the network in action.
"All quantum security schemes are based on the Heisenberg Uncertainty
Principle, on the fact that you cannot measure quantum information without
disturbing it," he explained.
"Because of that, one can have a communications channel between two users on
which it's impossible to eavesdrop without creating a disturbance. An
eavesdropper would create a mark on it. That was the key idea."
In practice this means using the ultimate quantum objects: photons, the "atoms
of light". Incredibly faint beams of light equating to single photons fired a
million times a second raced between the nodes in the Vienna network.
Each node, housed in a different Siemens office (Siemens has provided the fibre
links), contains a small rack of electronics - boxes about the size of a PC -
and a handful of sensitive light detectors.
Numerical key
From the detected photons, a totally secret numerical key can be distilled,
which encodes the users' data much like the keys used in normal computer
networks do.
The advantage is that no-one else can know the key without revealing
themselves.
As we saw in the demonstration, when an intruder did try to listen in on the
quantum exchange, photons became scrambled, and a rise in the error rate at the
node detectors signalled the attack. The system automatically shut down without
being compromised.
More importantly, the demonstration also showed that the network is robust.
If one quantum link breaks down, the connections can be re-routed via other
nodes, much as phone calls get re-routed automatically through a telecoms
network, so that any two users on the network can remain in continuous secure
contact.
Dr Hannes Huebel of Vienna University, operating one of the nodes, explained
how robustness was now as important as security in the development of quantum
encryption systems.
"We are constantly in touch with insurance companies and banks, and they say
it's nearly better that they lose 10m euros than if the system is down for two
hours, because that might be more damaging for the bank," said Dr Huebel.
"So that's what we have to prove, that we have a reliable system that delivers
quantum keys for several weeks without interruption, and then they might be
more interested."
Polarised light
The final element of the EU-sponsored project (called SECO-QC) was the
interconnection of different realisations of quantum cryptography.
There are many ways photons of light can encode a numerical key: through the
direction they're polarised (like Polaroid glasses) for example, or the precise
timing of their arrival.
Different schemes have different strengths and weaknesses, and a viable network
would have to handle whatever individual users choose to use, explained the
project's director, Christian Monyk - just as a mobile phone network has to
handle handsets from many manufacturers.
Quantum cryptography is a surprising outgrowth of recondite arguments that
bounced around for decades about the meaning of quantum mechanics.
Albert Einstein, who discovered the quantum properties of photons of light -
indeed, discovered the very concept of the photon - always resisted quantum
theory's spooky behaviour, "God does not play dice", being among his oft-quoted
objections.
But experiments eventually proved that he apparently does, and also laid the
technical foundations for today's quantum information revolution -
cryptography, teleportation, and computation.
One of the grandees of quantum science, Vienna University's Anton Zeilinger,
used the occasion to argue for continued funding of fundamental science in
these increasingly application-focused days.
"Real breakthroughs are not found because you want to develop some new
technology, but because you are curious and want to find out how the world is,"
Dr Zeilinger said.
"It may not have surprised the founding fathers of quantum science that
technology has advanced so that you can play with individual quantum systems,
in great detail.
"Maybe this would not surprise, but what could surprise them is that people are
thinking and doing practical applications."