My expertise is in computer and network security. I'm not a physicist. I was hoping someone could help explain something to me.
I have read "The Code Book: The Science of Secrecy from Ancient Egypt to Quantum Cryptography", but Simon Singh. In the section on quantum cryptography, he talks about an idea (not his idea, he is simply an author who is writing about many other people's cryptography work) for making dollar bills that cannot possibly be counterfeited. He doesn't say they would be difficult to counterfeit. He says it will be impossible.
The idea is to have a dollar bill with "light traps" (which don't exist yet) that can capture and hold a single photon. The photon will of course have one specific polarization. There would be, for example, 20 light traps, each with a single photon, each with a random polarization. The bill will also have a serial number on it.
Before the bill is released into circulation, the serial number and orientation of the photons in the light traps is recorded. So later, the bank could examine the serial number, look up the orientation of the photons in the light traps, and then measure the orientations with polarizing filters. If they are the correct orientation for what that bill should be (associated with its serial number), then they know that the bill is genuine, and not counterfeit.
He says that a counterfeiter would not be able to recreate the light traps with the correct polarization, because the counterfeiter cannot measure them. Of course, he tosses in the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.
But what Singh says makes no sense. He says that the counterfeiter could put a polarized filter in front of the light trap, and if it is not the correct orientation, the counterfeiter knows that it is incorrect. However, he said that the counterfeiter has no way to determine the correct orientation.
Why can't the counterfeiter just put the filter in front of the light-trap, and rotate it until he observes the photon in the light trap? This should tell him the orientation. This can be done with each of the light traps, and the coutnerfeiter could recreate this in the counterfeit bill.
It was my impression that the bank would measure the orientation of the photons in the light traps in the same way: orient polarized filters to be what should be correct for the light traps in that bill, and check if the photon in the light trap can be observed through it.
So why wouldn't my very obvious solution work? Note that Singh did not say it would be difficult and expensive to counterfeit the bill. He said that, due to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, it would be impossible.
Can a physicist clear this up for me? I get the feeling that Singh neglected something in his explanations.
I have read "The Code Book: The Science of Secrecy from Ancient Egypt to Quantum Cryptography", but Simon Singh. In the section on quantum cryptography, he talks about an idea (not his idea, he is simply an author who is writing about many other people's cryptography work) for making dollar bills that cannot possibly be counterfeited. He doesn't say they would be difficult to counterfeit. He says it will be impossible.
The idea is to have a dollar bill with "light traps" (which don't exist yet) that can capture and hold a single photon. The photon will of course have one specific polarization. There would be, for example, 20 light traps, each with a single photon, each with a random polarization. The bill will also have a serial number on it.
Before the bill is released into circulation, the serial number and orientation of the photons in the light traps is recorded. So later, the bank could examine the serial number, look up the orientation of the photons in the light traps, and then measure the orientations with polarizing filters. If they are the correct orientation for what that bill should be (associated with its serial number), then they know that the bill is genuine, and not counterfeit.
He says that a counterfeiter would not be able to recreate the light traps with the correct polarization, because the counterfeiter cannot measure them. Of course, he tosses in the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.
But what Singh says makes no sense. He says that the counterfeiter could put a polarized filter in front of the light trap, and if it is not the correct orientation, the counterfeiter knows that it is incorrect. However, he said that the counterfeiter has no way to determine the correct orientation.
Why can't the counterfeiter just put the filter in front of the light-trap, and rotate it until he observes the photon in the light trap? This should tell him the orientation. This can be done with each of the light traps, and the coutnerfeiter could recreate this in the counterfeit bill.
It was my impression that the bank would measure the orientation of the photons in the light traps in the same way: orient polarized filters to be what should be correct for the light traps in that bill, and check if the photon in the light trap can be observed through it.
So why wouldn't my very obvious solution work? Note that Singh did not say it would be difficult and expensive to counterfeit the bill. He said that, due to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, it would be impossible.
Can a physicist clear this up for me? I get the feeling that Singh neglected something in his explanations.