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      Chaotic phase noise-like encryption based on geometric shaping for coherent data center interconnections

      , , , , ,
      Optics Express
      Optica Publishing Group

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          Abstract

          The network traffic of data centers (DCs) has increased unprecedentedly with the rapid development of digital economy. However, the data transmission faces security threats in the distributed optical interconnection and intensive interaction of DC networks. In this paper, we propose a chaotic phase noise-like encryption algorithm using geometric shaping (GS) for coherent DC interconnections (DCIs). A GS constellation is used to improve transmission performance, and it is combined with coherent equalization algorithms to improve security performance. Then, a chaotic encryption is designed based on phase noise-like transformation (PNLT). The data are effectively scrambled, and the confusion level of phase can be increased. Finally, 216 Gb/s 8-quadrature amplitude modulation (8-QAM) encrypted data are successfully verified on a 240 km transmission link of DCIs. The results show that this scheme can achieve a bit error rate (BER) performance gain of 1.1 dB and provide a highly compatible solution for realizing security enhanced DCIs.

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          Most cited references47

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          Channel coding with multilevel/phase signals

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            YET ANOTHER CHAOTIC ATTRACTOR

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              Quantum computational advantage using photons.

              Quantum computers promise to perform certain tasks that are believed to be intractable to classical computers. Boson sampling is such a task and is considered a strong candidate to demonstrate the quantum computational advantage. We performed Gaussian boson sampling by sending 50 indistinguishable single-mode squeezed states into a 100-mode ultralow-loss interferometer with full connectivity and random matrix-the whole optical setup is phase-locked-and sampling the output using 100 high-efficiency single-photon detectors. The obtained samples were validated against plausible hypotheses exploiting thermal states, distinguishable photons, and uniform distribution. The photonic quantum computer, Jiuzhang, generates up to 76 output photon clicks, which yields an output state-space dimension of 1030 and a sampling rate that is faster than using the state-of-the-art simulation strategy and supercomputers by a factor of ~1014.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                OPEXFF
                Optics Express
                Opt. Express
                Optica Publishing Group
                1094-4087
                2024
                2024
                January 03 2024
                January 15 2024
                : 32
                : 2
                : 1595
                Article
                10.1364/OE.506738
                593c83ca-1eae-4e7b-bd08-f1c6004ba7b3
                © 2024

                https://doi.org/10.1364/OA_License_v2#VOR-OA

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