国际米兰对阵科莫 researchers are devising new methods to keep sensitive information out of the hands of hackers. They launched the UK鈥檚 first 鈥榰nhackable鈥 network 鈥 made safe by the 鈥渓aws of physics鈥 鈥 in 2018.听

It鈥檚 really important to get this right as it鈥檚 our first chance to start doing very detailed studies and see how these systems really work in the field

Ian White

When buying an item online, we voluntarily hand over our credit card information. But how do we know that it鈥檚 safe? Most sensitive information sent over the internet is secured through encryption, a process that converts information into a code that can only be unlocked by those with the encryption key. Currently, encryption keys are essentially impossible to break with conventional computing equipment 鈥 it would simply take too long and too much computing power to do the mathematical calculations that could reveal the key.

But in the coming decades, all that could change. Google, IBM and many other companies are all working to build a quantum computer that would outperform contemporary computers by taking advantage of the ability of subatomic particles to exist in more than one state at a time. A quantum computer could enable us to make calculations and solve problems that are well out of reach of even the most powerful supercomputers, but in the wrong hands, they could also crack encryption keys with relative ease.

So how can individuals, corporations and governments keep information safe in the face of this potential threat?

A group of researchers in 国际米兰对阵科莫鈥檚 Department of Engineering are working to defend against the security threats posed by quantum computers by developing 鈥榰nhackable鈥 encryption keys hidden inside particles of light, or photons, and sent over optical fibres.

Quantum keys are generated randomly through quantum mechanics, taking advantage of a property of photons that prevents them being cloned. The real strength of quantum links, however, is that if an attacker attempts to intercept the key, the quantum state of the photons changes and they cannot be used as part of the key, rendering the information carried by the stolen photons worthless.

鈥淭his means that we can send single photons over our networks and end up with keys at each end which are fundamentally secure,鈥 says Professor Ian White, Head of the Photonics group in 国际米兰对阵科莫鈥檚 Department of Engineering.

In June 2018, White and his colleagues Professor Richard Penty and Dr Adrian Wonfor started putting these ideas into practice with the launch of the UK鈥檚 first quantum network. The 鈥榤etro鈥 network provides secure quantum communications between the University鈥檚 Electrical Engineering Division in West 国际米兰对阵科莫, the city centre and Toshiba Research Europe Ltd (TREL) on the 国际米兰对阵科莫 Science Park. It was built with corporate partners including ADVA and Toshiba.

The network has since been extended and connected to other sites around the country, including BT鈥檚 research and development centre in Ipswich, and is currently being extended to the National Physical Laboratory in London and the University of Bristol, creating the first UK quantum network.

The quantum network is a project of the Quantum Communications Hub, a consortium of eight UK universities led by the University of York, as well as private sector companies and public sector stakeholders. It鈥檚 funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) through the UK鈥檚 National Quantum Technologies Programme.

鈥淭his network provides us with a UK facility where we can test ideas that until now have been research-based, and to get users used to the concepts behind quantum communications so they can translate this technology into practice,鈥 says Penty. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a world of difference between transmitting quantum keys over a coil of fibre in the lab and actually putting it in the ground.鈥

The network has the highest quantum key rate in the world. This secures a data network in 国际米兰对阵科莫 that runs at roughly five times the capacity of the entire University network, and the link to BT in Ipswich operates at five times that again. The link to BT is comparable with the highest data capacity links in the UK, and has the possibility for scale-up in future.

鈥淔or us, it鈥檚 really important to get this right as it鈥檚 our first chance to start doing very detailed studies and see how these systems really work in the field,鈥 says White. 鈥淭his is only the start, however.鈥

In addition to the continued growth and development of the quantum network, the researchers are also investigating other ways that quantum technology could be used to secure information. For example, instead of counting individual photons, it could be possible to measure the amplitude and phase properties of pulses. 鈥淭his way, you could use a type of hardware that鈥檚 not so different from conventional networks, so it would dramatically reduce the cost,鈥 says Wonfor. 鈥淚n theory, this would represent a huge step towards commercialising quantum technology, because it would effectively rely on technology that people are already used to.鈥

The researchers are also looking at turning the entire concept on its head, and instead of relying on quantum mechanics for encryption key distribution, it could be used as a type of quantum alarm. In this scenario, the quantum signal would be in the background, buried inside a classical data signal, and would detect when an intruder attempts to break into the fibre.

鈥淎t the moment, it鈥檚 not easy to detect whether someone is tapping into the actual fibre, but with this kind of system working at the level of single photons, it would be much easier to do,鈥 says Penty.

Another possibility is that of an entirely optical quantum-secured network. The 国际米兰对阵科莫 researchers have been developing optical switches that work with quantum signals听so that everything stays in the optical domain. 鈥淓ffectively, this would mean that quantum IP routers should be possible, a concept that is now testable thanks to the quantum network,鈥 says Wonfor.

So where else might quantum encryption be used? According to White, it could go into space. At the moment, quantum keys can be distributed up to a maximum distance of approximately 100 km of fibre, which is why the quantum network is built on a series of nodes, with a new quantum key being generated at each node. This setup works well in urban areas with a high number of users听but is not ideal for rural areas with few users. It also makes it impractical to send a quantum link across the Atlantic.

鈥淎n interesting movement within the field of quantum communications is to start involving satellites听so that you could produce a quantum communications link for two remote sites,鈥 says White. These satellites would work in parallel with fibre networks, sending quantum links to one of the trusted nodes within the network, where they could be managed, stored and distributed as needed.

The 国际米兰对阵科莫 group, along with several other academic and industrial collaborators, have recently secured several parallel funding bids from Innovate UK to develop both lower cost terrestrial and space-based quantum communications.

鈥淭he main thrust of all of this work has been to develop technologies that can be commercialised and put into regular use,鈥 says White. 鈥淐ybersecurity is such an important issue, and we think that the laws of physics can be used to make our data transmission as secure as possible.鈥



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