Özyeğin University, Çekmeköy Campus Nişantepe District, Orman Street, 34794 Çekmeköy - İSTANBUL

Phone : +90 (216) 564 90 00

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E-mail: info@ozyegin.edu.tr

Aug 18, 2020 - Aug 21, 2020

Thesis Defense - Naser Chamani Jam (MSEE)

 

 

Naser Chamani Jam - M.Sc.

Asst.Prof. Kadir Durak – Advisor

 

 

Date: 21.08.2020

Time: 14:00

Location: This meeting will be held ONLINE. Please send an e-mail to gizem.bakir@ozyegin.edu.tr in order to participate in this defense.

 

Side-channel Attack to Quantum Communications

by Exploiting Electromagnetic Radiations of the Single Photon Detectors

 

 

Thesis Committee:

Asst.Prof. Kadir Durak ,  Özyeğin University

Asst.Prof. Ahmed Akgiray,  Özyeğin University

Assoc.Prof. Saeid Karamzadeh,  Bahçeşehir University

 

Abstract:

In this thesis an unprecedented cyber-physical attack that can be a game changer in the quantum cryptosystems’ security is explained[91] . This attack is the first non-optical patented intercept in the quantum field that is based on a security issue in the physical layer of the quantum communication and key distribution systems. We experimentally and theoretically showed that the bit contents of a quantum key transmission system can be intercepted from far away by exploiting the ultrawideband electromagnetic signals radiated from the hi-voltage avalanche effect of the single-photon detectors.

This concept was a significant hidden secret based on the physical nature of the single-photon detectors that are generally used in quantum key distribution. It has been proved theoretically and experimentally that any Geiger-mode avalanche photodiode that is used inside single-photon detectors, systematically acts like a downconverter that converts the optical-wavelength photons to radio-wavelength photons. Our experiments also showed that the radiated waveforms captured by an ultrawideband antenna can be used as a unique fingerprint to find which photodiode in the cryptosystem has absorbed a photon. These fingerprints were fed to a deep learning neural network as training data, and after training, the neural network was able to clone the bit content of quantum transmission with high accuracy.

 

Bio: 

Naser Jam received his B.Sc. Degree in Electrical Engineering from Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran in 1991. After graduation, he worked as an engineer, chief designer, and project manager in Radar and Communications projects in the Electronic Research Center of the Sharif University. From 2018 he joined Özyeğin University as a graduate student and a member of the quantum optics lab. Naser’s main research areas are quantum sensing and quantum communications.