Phys.org: Quantum cryptography: Making hacking futile.
https://phys.org/news/2022-07-quantum-cryptography-hacking-futile.html

The Internet is teeming with highly sensitive information. Sophisticated 
encryption techniques generally ensure that such content cannot be intercepted 
and read. But in the future high-performance quantum computers could crack 
these keys in a matter of seconds. It is just as well, then, that quantum 
mechanical techniques not only enable new, much faster algorithms, but also 
exceedingly effective cryptography.

Quantum key distribution (QKD)—as the jargon has it—is secure against attacks 
on the communication channel, but not against attacks on or manipulations of 
the devices themselves. The devices could therefore output a key which the 
manufacturer had previously saved and might conceivably have forwarded to a 
hacker. With device- independent QKD (abbreviated to DIQKD), it is a different 
story. Here, the cryptographic protocol is independent of the device used. 
Theoretically known since the 1990s, this method has now been experimentally 
realized for the first time, by an international research group led by LMU 
physicist Harald Weinfurter and Charles Lim from the National University of 
Singapore (NUS).

For exchanging quantum mechanical keys, there are different approaches 
available. Either light signals are sent by the transmitter to the receiver, or 
entangled quantum systems are used. In the present experiment, the physicists 
used two quantum mechanically entangled rubidium atoms, situated in two 
laboratories located 400 meters from each other on the LMU campus. The two 
locations are connected via a fiber optic cable 700 meters in length, which 
runs beneath Geschwister Scholl Square in front of the main building.

To create an entanglement, first the scientists excite each of the atoms with a 
laser pulse. After this, the atoms spontaneously fall back into their ground 
state, each thereby emitting a photon. Due to the conservation of angular 
momentum, the spin of the atom is entangled with the polarization of its 
emitted photon. The two light particles travel along the fiber optic cable to a 
receiver station, where a joint measurement of the photons indicates an 
entanglement of the atomic quantum memories.

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