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Optimization of Information Reconciliation for Decoy-State Quantum Key Distribution over a Satellite Downlink Channel

Published: November 7, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2511.05196v1

By: Thomas Scarinzi , Davide Orsucci , Marco Ferrari and more

Potential Business Impact:

Makes secret codes from space more secure.

Business Areas:
Satellite Communication Hardware

Quantum key distribution (QKD) is a cryptographic solution that leverages the properties of quantum mechanics to be resistant and secure even against an attacker with unlimited computational power. Satellite-based links are important in QKD because they can reach distances that the best fiber systems cannot. However, links between satellites in low Earth orbit (LEO) and ground stations have a duration of only a few minutes, resulting in the generation of a small amount of secure keys. In this context, we investigate the optimization of the information reconciliation step of the QKD post-processing in order to generate as much secure key as possible. As a first step, we build an accurate model of the downlink signal and quantum bit error rate (QBER) during a complete satellite pass, which are time-varying due to three effects: (i) the varying link geometry over time, (ii) the scintillation effect, and (iii) the different signal intensities adopted in the Decoy-State protocol. Leveraging the a-priori information on the instantaneous QBER, we improve the efficiency of information reconciliation (IR) (i.e., the error correction phase) in the Decoy-State BB84 protocol, resulting in a secure key that is almost 3\% longer for realistic scenarios.

Country of Origin
🇮🇹 Italy

Page Count
10 pages

Category
Physics:
Quantum Physics