Darmstadt 2008 – scientific programme
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Q: Fachverband Quantenoptik und Photonik
Q 31: Quanteninformation (Konzepte und Methoden I)
Q 31.2: Talk
Thursday, March 13, 2008, 08:45–09:00, 1B
Possibility, Impossibility and Cheat-Sensitivity of Quantum Bit String Commitment — Harry Buhrman1, •Matthias Christandl2, Patrick Hayden3, Hoi-Kwong Lo4, and Stephanie Wehner1 — 1CWI Amsterdam, The Netherlands — 2University of Cambridge, United Kingdom — 3McGill University, Montreal, Canada — 4University of Toronto, Canada
Unconditionally secure non-relativistic bit commitment is known to be impossible in both the classical and the quantum worlds. But when committing to a string of n bits at once, how far can we stretch the quantum limits? In this paper, we introduce a framework for quantum schemes where Alice commits a string of n bits to Bob in such a way that she can only cheat on a bits and Bob can learn at most b bits of information before the reveal phase.
Our results are two-fold: we show by an explicit construction that in the traditional approach, where the reveal and guess probabilities form the security criteria, no good schemes can exist: a+b is at least n. If, however, we use a more liberal criterion of security, the accessible information, we construct schemes where a=4log2 n+O(1) and b=4, which is impossible classically.
We furthermore present a cheat-sensitive quantum bit string commitment protocol for which we give an explicit tradeoff between Bob’s ability to gain information about the committed string, and the probability of him being detected cheating.