PRX Quantum (Oct 2022)

Protecting Fiber-Optic Quantum Key Distribution Sources against Light-Injection Attacks

  • Anastasiya Ponosova,
  • Daria Ruzhitskaya,
  • Poompong Chaiwongkhot,
  • Vladimir Egorov,
  • Vadim Makarov,
  • Anqi Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PRXQuantum.3.040307
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 4
p. 040307

Abstract

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A well-protected and characterized source in a quantum key distribution system is needed for its security. Unfortunately, the source is vulnerable to light-injection attacks, such as Trojan-horse, laser-seeding, and laser-damage attacks, in which an eavesdropper actively injects bright light to hack the source unit. The hacking laser could be a high-power one that can modify properties of components via the laser-damage attack and also further help the Trojan-horse and other light-injection attacks. Here we propose a countermeasure against the light-injection attacks, consisting of an additional sacrificial component placed at the exit of the source. This component should either withstand high-power incoming light while attenuating it to a safe level that cannot modify the rest of the source, or get destroyed into a permanent high-attenuation state that breaks up the line. We demonstrate experimentally that off-the-shelf fiber-optic isolators and circulators have these desired properties, at least under attack by a continuous-wave high-power laser.