Demystifying the information reconciliation protocol cascade
(pp0453-0477)
Jesus
Martinez-Mateo, Christoph Pacher, Momtchil Peev, Alex Ciurana, and
Vicente Martin
doi:
https://doi.org/10.26421/QIC15.5-6-6
Abstracts:
Cascade is an information reconciliation protocol
proposed in the context of secret key agreement in quantum cryptography.
This protocol allows removing discrepancies in two partially correlated
sequences that belong to distant parties, connected through a public
noiseless channel. It is highly interactive, thus requiring a large
number of channel communications between the parties to proceed and,
although its efficiency is not optimal, it has become the de-facto
standard for practical implementations of information reconciliation in
quantum key distribution. The aim of this work is to analyze the
performance of Cascade, to discuss its strengths, weaknesses and
optimization possibilities, comparing with some of the modified versions
that have been proposed in the literature. When looking at all design
trade-offs, a new view emerges that allows to put forward a number of
guidelines and propose near optimal parameters for the practical
implementation of Cascade improving performance significantly in
comparison with all previous proposals.
Key words:
quantum key distribution, information reconciliation,
two-way reconciliation, cascade protocol |