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Main Authors: Truax, Lucas, Roy, Sandip, Kish, Laszlo B.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.10147
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author Truax, Lucas
Roy, Sandip
Kish, Laszlo B.
author_facet Truax, Lucas
Roy, Sandip
Kish, Laszlo B.
contents In this paper, we introduce the Kirchhoff-Law-Johnson-Noise (KLJN) as an approach to securing satellite communications. KLJN has the potential to revolutionize satellite communication security through its combination of simplicity, cost-effectiveness, and resilience with unconditional security. Unlike quantum key distribution (QKD), which requires complex, fragile, and expensive infrastructure like photon detectors and dedicated optical links, KLJN operates using standard electronic components and wires, significantly reducing implementation costs and logistical hurdles. KLJN's security, grounded in the fundamental laws of classical physics, is impervious to environmental and radiation-induced noise, making it highly reliable in the harsh conditions of satellite communications. This robustness, coupled with its ability to integrate seamlessly with existing infrastructure, positions KLJN as a revolutionary alternative to quantum solutions for ensuring secure, resilient satellite communications. The authors explore the value of achieving unconditionally secure communications in strategic ground-to-satellite networks which address vulnerabilities posed by advanced computational threats, including quantum computing. Our team has examined two leading approaches to unconditional security - the KLJN scheme and QKD - and analyzed the potential use of each for space systems. While QKD leverages quantum mechanics for security, it faces challenges related to cost, complexity, and environmental sensitivity. In contrast, the KLJN scheme utilizes classical physics principles to provide a simpler, more cost-effective, and resilient alternative, particularly for ground-based systems. The study concludes that KLJN offers significant advantages in simplicity, cost-efficiency, and robustness, making it a practical choice for many secure communication applications.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2506_10147
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Unconditionally Secure Wireless-Wired Ground-Satellite-Ground Communication Networks Utilizing Classical and Quantum Noise
Truax, Lucas
Roy, Sandip
Kish, Laszlo B.
Cryptography and Security
In this paper, we introduce the Kirchhoff-Law-Johnson-Noise (KLJN) as an approach to securing satellite communications. KLJN has the potential to revolutionize satellite communication security through its combination of simplicity, cost-effectiveness, and resilience with unconditional security. Unlike quantum key distribution (QKD), which requires complex, fragile, and expensive infrastructure like photon detectors and dedicated optical links, KLJN operates using standard electronic components and wires, significantly reducing implementation costs and logistical hurdles. KLJN's security, grounded in the fundamental laws of classical physics, is impervious to environmental and radiation-induced noise, making it highly reliable in the harsh conditions of satellite communications. This robustness, coupled with its ability to integrate seamlessly with existing infrastructure, positions KLJN as a revolutionary alternative to quantum solutions for ensuring secure, resilient satellite communications. The authors explore the value of achieving unconditionally secure communications in strategic ground-to-satellite networks which address vulnerabilities posed by advanced computational threats, including quantum computing. Our team has examined two leading approaches to unconditional security - the KLJN scheme and QKD - and analyzed the potential use of each for space systems. While QKD leverages quantum mechanics for security, it faces challenges related to cost, complexity, and environmental sensitivity. In contrast, the KLJN scheme utilizes classical physics principles to provide a simpler, more cost-effective, and resilient alternative, particularly for ground-based systems. The study concludes that KLJN offers significant advantages in simplicity, cost-efficiency, and robustness, making it a practical choice for many secure communication applications.
title Unconditionally Secure Wireless-Wired Ground-Satellite-Ground Communication Networks Utilizing Classical and Quantum Noise
topic Cryptography and Security
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.10147