Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) allows sharing encryption keys with information theoretic security. Satellitebased QKD can establish long distance links due to the quadratic transmission loss in free-space instead of the exponential transmission loss in optical fibers. Atmospheric background light plays an important role in the QKD scheme as it may significantly contribute to the system Quantum Bit Error Rate (QBER). Therefore, background light needs to be examined closely. Due to the high variability of atmospheric conditions, direct measurements of the background light under different meteorological conditions are the best option to properly characterize the effect. Current considerations are mainly limited to the analysis of cloud-free scenarios by simulation and by experiment. Links can also take place when the environment differs from this ideal condition. Measurement data was recorded in C-band at the campus of the University of Waterloo, Canada, during the day with clear sky and during sunset with clear sky and partly-clouded sky conditions. The measurement data is shown and compared to simulation results and to the measurement data taken in Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany. The impact of background light is discussed on a chosen reference scenario outlining the importance of detector gating time and end-to-end transmission loss when wanting to realize daylight QKD.
Quantum key distribution (QKD) enables private communication with information theoretic security. Free-space optical communication allows one to implement QKD without the limitations imposed by fiber networks such as the exponential scaling of transmission losses in optical fibers. Therefore, free-space QKD via satellite links is a promising technology to provide long-distance quantum communication connections. In free-space QKD systems, background light is the main source of noise, which has to be suppressed by means of spectral, spatial, and temporal filtering to reach a sufficiently low quantum bit error rate (QBER). Only then a quantum key can be exchanged successfully. To be able to define the requirements for a free-space QKD system, the background light must be examined more closely. Current considerations concentrate on cloud-free skies and rural environments. Free-space QKD will also take place when the sky is partly clouded and most likely also in urban environments. Here, an overview of physical causes of background light for downlink scenarios is given. Furthermore, the relation between QBER and background light is derived for a decoy-state BB84 protocol with polarization-encoded qubits to give an example of the dependency. Moreover, a setup to experimentally investigate the background light is shown. Measurement data were taken with this setup in Oberpfaffenhofen near Munich (Germany) in C-band. The measurement data are used to verify a background light simulation tool. The outcome underlines that simulation tools are sufficient for clear sky scenarios.
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