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Protocolo para autenticação quântica de mensagens clássicas. / Protocol for quantum authentication of classic messages.MEDEIROS, Rex Antonio da Costa. 01 August 2018 (has links)
Submitted by Johnny Rodrigues (johnnyrodrigues@ufcg.edu.br) on 2018-08-01T20:10:46Z
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REX ANTONIO COSTA MEDEIROS - DISSERTAÇÃO PPGEE 2004..pdf: 14601327 bytes, checksum: 5e8b5fae1a59cd77236adc8cc0655c17 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-01T20:10:46Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
REX ANTONIO COSTA MEDEIROS - DISSERTAÇÃO PPGEE 2004..pdf: 14601327 bytes, checksum: 5e8b5fae1a59cd77236adc8cc0655c17 (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2004-06-22 / CNPq / Nos dias atuais, os sistemas de criptografia e autenticação desempenham um papel
fundamental em aplicações que envolvem a manipulação de informações sigilosas, tais
como movimentações financeiras, comércio eletrônico, aplicações militares e proteção
de arquivos digitais. A popularização do uso dos sistemas de criptografia e autenticação se deve, em grande parte, a descrição de esquema de criptografia por chave pública. A segurança de tais sistemas é baseada na intratabilidade computacional (clássica) de problemas da teoria dos números, como a fatoração em produtos de primos e o problema do logaritmo discreto. A partir da formulação da Mecânica Quântica, foram demonstrados
algoritmos que, executados em um computador quântico e consumindo tempo e recursos
polinomiais, são capazes de resolver tais problemas. A construção de um computador
quântico inviabilizaria, portanto, o uso de sistemas de criptografia e autenticação por
chave pública. Nesta dissertação é discutido o problema da autenticação quântica de mensagens clássicas. É proposto um protocolo híbrido que alcança segurança incondicional, mesmo que um criptoanalista disponha de recursos computacionais infinitos, sejam eles clássicos ou quânticos. Através de uma prova matemática formal, é mostrado que o nível de segurança pode ser feito tão alto quanto desejado. Tal segurança é-garantida pelos princípios fundamentais da mecânica quântica. / Nowadays, cryptography and authentication play a central role in applications that
manipulates confidential information, like financial transactions, e-commerce, military
applications and digital data protection. The explosive growth of cryptosystems is mostly due to the discovery of the so-called public-kcy cryptosystems. The security of such systcms is based on the intractability of some problems from number theory, like factorization and the discrete logarithm problem. After the formulation of the quantum mechanics, several protocols wcre described in order to solve these problems in time and resources polynomials in their argumente. So, one can conclude that public-key cryptosystems are not secure in a scenario where an eavesdropper makes use of quantum computers. In this work it is discussed the problem of quantum authenticating classical messages. It is proposed a non-interactive hybrid protocol reaching information-theoretical
security, even when an eavesdropper possesses both infinite quantum and classical computei- power. It is presented a mathematical proof that it is always possible to reach a
desirable levei of security. This security is due to the quantum mechanics proprieties
of non-orthogonal quantum states.
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Collective Quantum Jumps of Rydberg Atoms Undergoing Two-Channel Spontaneous EmissionCayayan, Lyndon Mark D. 10 August 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Transfert d'information quantique et intrication sur réseaux photoniquesBossé, Éric-Olivier 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Atomically controlled device fabrication using STMRuess, Frank Joachim, Physics, Faculty of Science, UNSW January 2006 (has links)
We present the development of a novel, UHV-compatible device fabrication strategy for the realisation of nano- and atomic-scale devices in silicon by harnessing the atomic-resolution capability of a scanning tunnelling microscope (STM). We develop etched registration markers in the silicon substrate in combination with a custom-designed STM/ molecular beam epitaxy system (MBE) to solve one of the key problems in STM device fabrication ??? connecting devices, fabricated in UHV, to the outside world. Using hydrogen-based STM lithography in combination with phosphine, as a dopant source, and silicon MBE, we then go on to fabricate several planar Si:P devices on one chip, including control devices that demonstrate the efficiency of each stage of the fabrication process. We demonstrate that we can perform four terminal magnetoconductance measurements at cryogenic temperatures after ex-situ alignment of metal contacts to the buried device. Using this process, we demonstrate the lateral confinement of P dopants in a delta-doped plane to a line of width 90nm; and observe the cross-over from 2D to 1D magnetotransport. These measurements enable us to extract the wire width which is in excellent agreement with STM images of the patterned wire. We then create STM-patterned Si:P wires with widths from 90nm to 8nm that show ohmic conduction and low resistivities of 1 to 20 micro Ohm-cm respectively ??? some of the highest conductivity wires reported in silicon. We study the dominant scattering mechanisms in the wires and find that temperature-dependent magnetoconductance can be described by a combination of both 1D weak localisation and 1D electron-electron interaction theories with a potential crossover to strong localisation at lower temperatures. We present results from STM-patterned tunnel junctions with gap sizes of 50nm and 17nm exhibiting clean, non-linear characteristics. We also present preliminary conductance results from a 70nm long and 90nm wide dot between source-drain leads which show evidence of Coulomb blockade behaviour. The thesis demonstrates the viability of using STM lithography to make devices in silicon down to atomic-scale dimensions. In particular, we show the enormous potential of this technology to directly correlate images of the doped regions with ex-situ electrical device characteristics.
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SurvSec Security Architecture for Reliable Surveillance WSN Recovery from Base Station FailureMegahed, Mohamed Helmy Mostafa 30 May 2014 (has links)
Surveillance wireless sensor networks (WSNs) are highly vulnerable to the failure of the base station (BS) because attackers can easily render the network useless for relatively long periods of time by only destroying the BS. The time and effort needed to destroy the BS is much less than that needed to destroy the numerous sensing nodes.
Previous works have tackled BS failure by deploying a mobile BS or by using multiple BSs, which requires extra cost. Moreover, despite using the best electronic countermeasures, intrusion tolerance systems and anti-traffic analysis strategies to protect the BSs, an adversary can still destroy them. The new BS cannot trust the deployed sensor nodes. Also, previous works lack both the procedures to ensure network reliability and security during BS failure such as storing then sending reports concerning security threats against nodes to the new BS and the procedures to verify the trustworthiness of the deployed sensing nodes. Otherwise, a new WSN must be re-deployed which involves a high cost and requires time for the deployment and setup of the new WSN. In this thesis, we address the problem of reliable recovery from a BS failure by proposing a new security architecture called Surveillance Security (SurvSec).
SurvSec continuously monitors the network for security threats and stores data related to node security, detects and authenticates the new BS, and recovers the stored data at the new BS. SurvSec includes encryption for security-related information using an efficient dynamic secret sharing algorithm, where previous work has high computations for dynamic secret sharing. SurvSec includes compromised nodes detection protocol against collaborative work of attackers working at the same time where previous works have been inefficient against collaborative work of attackers working at the same time.
SurvSec includes a key management scheme for homogenous WSN, where previous works assume heterogeneous WSN using High-end Sensor Nodes (HSN) which are the best target for the attackers. SurvSec includes efficient encryption architecture against quantum computers with a low time delay for encryption and decryption, where previous works have had high time delay to encrypt and decrypt large data size, where AES-256 has 14 rounds and high delay. SurvSec consists of five components, which are:
1. A Hierarchical Data Storage and Data Recovery System.
2. Security for the Stored Data using a new dynamic secret sharing algorithm.
3. A Compromised-Nodes Detection Algorithm at the first stage.
4. A Hybrid and Dynamic Key Management scheme for homogenous network.
5. Powerful Encryption Architecture for post-quantum computers with low time delay.
In this thesis, we introduce six new contributions which are the followings:
1. The development of the new security architecture called Surveillance Security (SurvSec) based on distributed Security Managers (SMs) to enable distributed network security and distributed secure storage.
2. The design of a new dynamic secret sharing algorithm to secure the stored data by using distributed users tables.
3. A new algorithm to detect compromised nodes at the first stage, when a group of attackers capture many legitimate nodes after the base station destruction. This algorithm is designed to be resistant against a group of attackers working at the same time to compromise many legitimate nodes during the base station failure.
4. A hybrid and dynamic key management scheme for homogenous network which is called certificates shared verification key management.
5. A new encryption architecture which is called the spread spectrum encryption architecture SSEA to resist quantum-computers attacks.
6. Hardware implementation of reliable network recovery from BS failure.
The description of the new security architecture SurvSec components is done followed by a simulation and analytical study of the proposed solutions to show its performance.
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Atomically controlled device fabrication using STMRuess, Frank Joachim, Physics, Faculty of Science, UNSW January 2006 (has links)
We present the development of a novel, UHV-compatible device fabrication strategy for the realisation of nano- and atomic-scale devices in silicon by harnessing the atomic-resolution capability of a scanning tunnelling microscope (STM). We develop etched registration markers in the silicon substrate in combination with a custom-designed STM/ molecular beam epitaxy system (MBE) to solve one of the key problems in STM device fabrication ??? connecting devices, fabricated in UHV, to the outside world. Using hydrogen-based STM lithography in combination with phosphine, as a dopant source, and silicon MBE, we then go on to fabricate several planar Si:P devices on one chip, including control devices that demonstrate the efficiency of each stage of the fabrication process. We demonstrate that we can perform four terminal magnetoconductance measurements at cryogenic temperatures after ex-situ alignment of metal contacts to the buried device. Using this process, we demonstrate the lateral confinement of P dopants in a delta-doped plane to a line of width 90nm; and observe the cross-over from 2D to 1D magnetotransport. These measurements enable us to extract the wire width which is in excellent agreement with STM images of the patterned wire. We then create STM-patterned Si:P wires with widths from 90nm to 8nm that show ohmic conduction and low resistivities of 1 to 20 micro Ohm-cm respectively ??? some of the highest conductivity wires reported in silicon. We study the dominant scattering mechanisms in the wires and find that temperature-dependent magnetoconductance can be described by a combination of both 1D weak localisation and 1D electron-electron interaction theories with a potential crossover to strong localisation at lower temperatures. We present results from STM-patterned tunnel junctions with gap sizes of 50nm and 17nm exhibiting clean, non-linear characteristics. We also present preliminary conductance results from a 70nm long and 90nm wide dot between source-drain leads which show evidence of Coulomb blockade behaviour. The thesis demonstrates the viability of using STM lithography to make devices in silicon down to atomic-scale dimensions. In particular, we show the enormous potential of this technology to directly correlate images of the doped regions with ex-situ electrical device characteristics.
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SurvSec Security Architecture for Reliable Surveillance WSN Recovery from Base Station FailureMegahed, Mohamed Helmy Mostafa January 2014 (has links)
Surveillance wireless sensor networks (WSNs) are highly vulnerable to the failure of the base station (BS) because attackers can easily render the network useless for relatively long periods of time by only destroying the BS. The time and effort needed to destroy the BS is much less than that needed to destroy the numerous sensing nodes.
Previous works have tackled BS failure by deploying a mobile BS or by using multiple BSs, which requires extra cost. Moreover, despite using the best electronic countermeasures, intrusion tolerance systems and anti-traffic analysis strategies to protect the BSs, an adversary can still destroy them. The new BS cannot trust the deployed sensor nodes. Also, previous works lack both the procedures to ensure network reliability and security during BS failure such as storing then sending reports concerning security threats against nodes to the new BS and the procedures to verify the trustworthiness of the deployed sensing nodes. Otherwise, a new WSN must be re-deployed which involves a high cost and requires time for the deployment and setup of the new WSN. In this thesis, we address the problem of reliable recovery from a BS failure by proposing a new security architecture called Surveillance Security (SurvSec).
SurvSec continuously monitors the network for security threats and stores data related to node security, detects and authenticates the new BS, and recovers the stored data at the new BS. SurvSec includes encryption for security-related information using an efficient dynamic secret sharing algorithm, where previous work has high computations for dynamic secret sharing. SurvSec includes compromised nodes detection protocol against collaborative work of attackers working at the same time where previous works have been inefficient against collaborative work of attackers working at the same time.
SurvSec includes a key management scheme for homogenous WSN, where previous works assume heterogeneous WSN using High-end Sensor Nodes (HSN) which are the best target for the attackers. SurvSec includes efficient encryption architecture against quantum computers with a low time delay for encryption and decryption, where previous works have had high time delay to encrypt and decrypt large data size, where AES-256 has 14 rounds and high delay. SurvSec consists of five components, which are:
1. A Hierarchical Data Storage and Data Recovery System.
2. Security for the Stored Data using a new dynamic secret sharing algorithm.
3. A Compromised-Nodes Detection Algorithm at the first stage.
4. A Hybrid and Dynamic Key Management scheme for homogenous network.
5. Powerful Encryption Architecture for post-quantum computers with low time delay.
In this thesis, we introduce six new contributions which are the followings:
1. The development of the new security architecture called Surveillance Security (SurvSec) based on distributed Security Managers (SMs) to enable distributed network security and distributed secure storage.
2. The design of a new dynamic secret sharing algorithm to secure the stored data by using distributed users tables.
3. A new algorithm to detect compromised nodes at the first stage, when a group of attackers capture many legitimate nodes after the base station destruction. This algorithm is designed to be resistant against a group of attackers working at the same time to compromise many legitimate nodes during the base station failure.
4. A hybrid and dynamic key management scheme for homogenous network which is called certificates shared verification key management.
5. A new encryption architecture which is called the spread spectrum encryption architecture SSEA to resist quantum-computers attacks.
6. Hardware implementation of reliable network recovery from BS failure.
The description of the new security architecture SurvSec components is done followed by a simulation and analytical study of the proposed solutions to show its performance.
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