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Airborne Quantum Key Distribution with Boundary Layer Effects

Published 18 Aug 2021 in quant-ph | (2108.08188v1)

Abstract: Airborne quantum key distribution (QKD) is now becoming a flexible bond between terrestrial fiber and satellite, which is an efficient solution to establish a mobile, on-demand, and real-time coverage quantum network. Furthermore, When the aircraft is flying at a high speed, usually larger than 0.3 Ma, the produced boundary layer will impair the performance of aircraft-based QKD. The boundary layer would introduce random wavefront aberration, jitter and extra intensity attenuation to the transmitted photons. However, previous airborne QKD implementations only considered the influences from atmospheric turbulence and molecular scattering, but ignored the boundary layer effects. In this article, we propose a detailed performance evaluation scheme of airborne QKD with boundary layer effects and estimate the overall photon transmission efficiency, quantum bit error rate and final secure key rate. Through simulations and modeling, in our proposed airborne QKD scenario, the boundary layer would introduce 3.5dB loss to the transmitted photons and decrease 70.7% of the secure key rate, which shows that the aero-optical effects caused by the boundary layer can not be ignored. With tolerated quantum bit error rate set to 10%, the suggested quantum communication azimuth angle between the aircraft and the ground station is within 60 degrees. Moreover, the optimal beacon laser module and adaptive optics module are suggested to be employed to improve the performance of airborne QKD system. Our detailed airborne QKD evaluation study can be performed to the future airborne quantum communication designs.

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