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Verevkin A, Williams C, Gol’tsman GN, Sobolewski R, Gilbert G. Single-photon superconducting detectors for practical high-speed quantum cryptography. Optical Society of America; 2001.
Abstract: We have developed an ultrafast superconducting single-photon detector with negligible dark counting rate. The detector is based on an ultrathin, submicron-wide NbN meander-type stripe and can detect individual photons in the visible to near-infrared wavelength range at a rate of at least 10 Gb/s. The above counting rate allows us to implement the NbN device to unconditionally secret quantum key distRochester, New Yorkribution in a practical, high-speed system using real-time Vernam enciphering.
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Takesue H, Nam SW, Zhang Q, Hadfield RH, Honjo T, Tamaki K, et al. Quantum key distribution over a 40-dB channel loss using superconducting single-photon detectors. Nat Photon. 2007;1:343–8.
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Stucki D, Walenta N, Vannel F, Thew RT, Gisin N, Zbinden H, et al. High rate long-distance quantum key distribution over 250 km of ultra low loss fibres. New J. Phys.. 2009;11(7):075003.
Abstract: We present a fully automated quantum key distribution prototype running at 625 MHz clock rate. Taking advantage of ultra low loss fibres and low-noise superconducting detectors, we can distribute 6,000 secret bits per second over 100 km and 15 bits per second over 250km.
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Stevens M, Hadfield R, Schwall R, Nam SW, Mirin R, Gupta J. Fast lifetime measurements of infrared emitters using a low-jitter superconduct- ing single-photon detector. Appl Phys Lett. 2006;89:031109.
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Stevens M, Hadfeld R, Schwall R, Nam SW, and Mirin R. Quantum dot single photon sources studied with superconducting single photon detectors. IEEE J. Sel. Topics Quantum Electron.. 2006;12(6):1255–67.
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