Quantum mechanics provides means of generating genuine randomness that is impossible with deterministic classical processes. Remarkably, the unpredictability of randomness can be certified in a self-testing manner that is independent of implementation devices. Here, we present an experimental demonstration of self-testing quantum random number generation based on an detection-loophole free Bell test with entangled photons. In the randomness analysis, without the assumption of independent identical distribution, we consider the worst case scenario that the adversary launches the most powerful attacks against quantum adversary. After considering statistical fluctuations and applying an 80 Gb × 45.6 Mb Toeplitz matrix hashing, we achieve a final random bit rate of 114 bits/s, with a failure probability less than 10 −5 . Such self-testing random number generators mark a critical step towards realistic applications in cryptography and fundamental physics tests.
2Introduction.-Random numbers are widely used in applications ranging from numerical
We interpret the experimental observation of a frequency-dependence of superconducting hot electron bolometer (HEB) mixers by taking into account the non-uniform absorption of the terahertz radiation on the superconducting HEB microbridge. The radiation absorption is assumed to be proportional to the local surface resistance of the HEB microbridge, which is computed using the Mattis-Bardeen theory. With this assumption the dc and mixing characteristics of a superconducting niobium-nitride (NbN) HEB device have been modeled at frequencies below and above the equilibrium gap frequency of the NbN film.
Classical correlation can be locked via quantum means--quantum data locking.
With a short secret key, one can lock an exponentially large amount of
information, in order to make it inaccessible to unauthorized users without the
key. Quantum data locking presents a resource-efficient alternative to one-time
pad encryption which requires a key no shorter than the message. We report
experimental demonstrations of quantum data locking scheme originally proposed
by DiVincenzo et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 067902 (2004)] and a loss-tolerant
scheme developed by Fawzi, Hayde, and Sen [J. ACM. 60, 44 (2013)]. We observe
that the unlocked amount of information is larger than the key size in both
experiments, exhibiting strong violation of the incremental proportionality
property of classical information theory. As an application example, we show
the successful transmission of a photo over a lossy channel with quantum data
(un)locking and error correction
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