Dan Kenigsberg
Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Dan Kenigsberg.
Physical Review Letters | 2007
Michel Boyer; Dan Kenigsberg; Tal Mor
Secure key distribution among two remote parties is impossible when both are classical, unless some unproven (and arguably unrealistic) computation-complexity assumptions are made, such as the difficulty of factorizing large numbers. On the other hand, a secure key distribution is possible when both parties are quantum. What is possible when only one party (Alice) is quantum, yet the other (Bob) has only classical capabilities? We present two protocols with this constraint, and prove their robustness against attacks: we prove that any attempt of an adversary to obtain information (and even a tiny amount of information) necessarily induces some errors that the legitimate users could notice.
Physical Review A | 2009
Michel Boyer; Ran Gelles; Dan Kenigsberg; Tal Mor
Secure key distribution among two remote parties is impossible when both are classical, unless some unproven (and arguably unrealistic) computation-complexity assumptions are made, such as the difficulty of factorizing large numbers. On the other hand, a secure key distribution is possible when both parties are quantum. What is possible when only one party (Alice) is quantum, yet the other (Bob) has only classical capabilities? Recently, a semi-quantum key distribution protocol was presented (Boyer, Kenigsberg and Mor, Physical Review Letters, 2007), in which one of the parties (Bob) is classical, and yet, the protocol is proven to be completely robust against an eavesdropping attempt. Here we extend that result much further. We present two protocols with this constraint, and prove their robustness against attacks: we prove that any attempt of an adversary to obtain information (and even a tiny amount of information) necessarily induces some errors that the legitimate parties could notice. One protocol presented here is identical to the one referred to above, however, its robustness is proven here in a much more general scenario. The other protocol is very different as it is based on randomization.
Theoretical Computer Science | 2004
Eli Biham; Gilles Brassard; Dan Kenigsberg; Tal Mor
It is generally believed that entanglement is essential for quantum computing. We present here a few simple examples in which quantum computing without entanglement is better than anything classically achievable, in terms of the reliability of the outcome after a fixed number of oracle calls. Using a separable (that is, unentangled) state, we show that the Deutsch-Jozsa problem and the Simon problem can be solved more reliably by a quantum computer than by the best possible classical algorithm, even probabilistic. We conclude that: (a) entanglement is not essential for quantum computing; and (b) some advantage of quantum algorithms over classical algorithms persists even when the quantum state contains an arbitrarily small amount of information--that is, even when the state is arbitrarily close to being totally mixed.
Quantum Information & Computation | 2006
Dan Kenigsberg; Tal Mor; Gil Ratsaby
We study the advantage of pure-state quantum computation without entanglement over classical computation. For the Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm we present the maximal subproblem that can be solved without entanglement, and show that the algorithm still has an advantage over the classical ones. We further show that this subproblem is of greater significance, by proving that it contains all the Boolean functions whose quantum phase-oracle is non-entangling. For Simons and Grovers algorithms we provide simple proofs that no non-trivial subproblems can be solved by these algorithms without entanglement.
Physical Review A | 2002
Eli Biham; Dan Kenigsberg
The Grover quantum search algorithm is generalized to deal with an arbitrary mixed initial state. The probability to measure a marked state as a function of time is calculated, and found to depend strongly on the specific initial state. The form of the function, though, remains as it is in the case of initial pure state. We study the role of the von Neumann entropy of the initial state, and show that the entropy cannot be a measure for the usefulness of the algorithm. We give few examples and show that for some extremely mixed initial states (carrying high entropy), the generalized Grover algorithm is considerably faster than any classical algorithm.
Physical Review Letters | 2009
Michel Boyer; Dan Kenigsberg; Tal Mor
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2007
Berry Groisman; Dan Kenigsberg; Tal Mor
Archive | 2001
Dan Kenigsberg; Eli Biham
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2006
Dan Kenigsberg; Tal Mor
Archive | 2002
Bart Preneel; Antoon Bosselaers; Sidi Ben Ors; Alex Biryukov; Louis Granboulan; Emmanuelle Dottax; Markus Dichtl; Stefan Pyka; Pascale Serf; Eli Biham; Orr Dunkelman; Dan Kenigsberg; Yan Braziler; J. Stolin