Fiber Optics Upgrades Cryptography
An autocompensating quantum cryptography technique based upon manipulating a pulse of light split into equal orthogonally polarized components has received a significant upgrade with the integration of fiber optics into the coding/decoding process.
Designed by
IBM's Almaden Research Center in San Jose, Calif., the technique previously used bulk optics to generate coded information at approximately 200 b/s with a 5 percent bit error rate. As reported in the March 20 issue of
Applied Optics, the replacement of these optics with fiber technology produced a speed of 1.5 kb/s with a 1.5 percent bit error rate -- attributed largely to a reduction in noise from backscattering and signal attenuation.
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