Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
As we have said, quantum mechanics has become the standard framework for most of what is done in physics and indeed has played this role for three-quarters of a century. For just as long, physicists and philosophers have, as we have already suggested, raised and discussed questions about the interpretation of quantum mechanics: Why do we single out measurement as a special kind of interaction that evokes a probabilistic, irreversible response from nature, when other kinds of interaction cause deterministic, reversible changes? How should we talk about quantum superpositions? What does entanglement tell us about the nature of reality? These are interesting questions and researchers still argue about the answers. However, in the last couple of decades researchers have also been thinking along the following line: Let us accept that quantum objects act in weird ways, and see if we can use this weirdness technologically. The two best examples of potential uses of quantum weirdness are quantum computation and quantum cryptography.
One of the first quantum cryptographic schemes to appear in the literature, and the only one we consider in detail in this book, was introduced by Charles Bennett and Gilles Brassard in 1984. Their idea is not to use quantum signals directly to convey secret information. Rather, they suggest using quantum signals to generate a secret cryptographic key shared between two parties. Thus the Bennett–Brassard scheme is an example of “quantum key distribution.”
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