Dynamic multi-party quantum private comparison protocol with single photons in both polarization and spatial-mode degrees of freedom
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2400218
DOI10.1007/s10773-016-3150-4zbMath1371.81091OpenAlexW2514524119MaRDI QIDQ2400218
Publication date: 28 August 2017
Published in: International Journal of Theoretical Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10773-016-3150-4
correctnesssecurityinformation leakagesingle photons in both polarization and spatial-mode degrees of freedomdynamic multi-party quantum private comparison protocol
Cryptography (94A60) Quantum optics (81V80) Quantum cryptography (quantum-theoretic aspects) (81P94)
Related Items (7)
An novel protocol for the quantum secure multi-party summation based on two-particle Bell states ⋮ Quantum protocol for privacy preserving Hamming distance problem of DNA sequences ⋮ A quantum protocol for private substitution problem ⋮ Novel two-party quantum private comparison via quantum walks on circle ⋮ Multi-party quantum private comparison with qudit shifting operation ⋮ A novel quantum solution to privacy-preserving lexicographical string sorting problem ⋮ Quantum protocol for millionaire problem
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A protocol for the quantum private comparison of equality with \(\chi \)-type state
- New quantum private comparison protocol using \(\chi \)-type state
- Multi-party quantum private comparison protocol using \(d\)-dimensional basis states without entanglement swapping
- Quantum private comparison based on GHZ entangled states
- Quantum multi-party private comparison protocol using \(d\)-dimensional Bell states
- Quantum Private Comparison Protocol Based on Bell Entangled States
- An efficient two-party quantum private comparison protocol with decoy photons and two-photon entanglement
- A fair and efficient solution to the socialist millionaires' problem
This page was built for publication: Dynamic multi-party quantum private comparison protocol with single photons in both polarization and spatial-mode degrees of freedom