Computational Monogamy of Entanglement and Non-Interactive Quantum Key Distribution

Open Access
Authors
  • Alex B. Grilo
  • Giulio Malavolta
  • M. Walter
  • Tianwei Zhang
Publication date 2026
Host editors
  • B. Applebaum
  • H. Lin
Book title Theory of Cryptography
Book subtitle 23rd International Conference, TCC 2025, Aarhus, Denmark, December 1–5, 2025 : proceedings
ISBN
  • 9783032122957
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9783032122964
Series Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Event 23rd International Conference on Theory of Cryptography
Volume | Issue number III
Pages (from-to) 36-68
Publisher Cham: Springer
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Korteweg-de Vries Institute for Mathematics (KdVI)
Abstract

uantum key distribution (QKD) enables Alice and Bob to exchange a secret key over a public, untrusted quantum channel. Compared to classical key exchange, QKD achieves everlasting security: after the protocol execution the key is secure against adversaries that can do unbounded computations. On the flip side, while classical key exchange can be achieved non-interactively (with two simultaneous messages between Alice and Bob), no non-interactive protocol is known that provides everlasting security, even using quantum information.

In this work, we make progress on this problem. Our main technical contribution is a computational variant of the celebrated monogamy of entanglement game, where the secret is only computationally hidden from the players, rather than information-theoretically. In these settings, we prove a negligible bound on the maximal winning probability over all strategies. As a direct application, we obtain a non-interactive (simultaneous message) QKD protocol from any post-quantum classical non-interactive key exchange, which satisfies everlastingly secure assuming Alice and Bob agree on the same key. The protocol only uses EPR pairs and standard and Hadamard basis measurements, making it suitable for near-term quantum hardware. We also propose how to convert this protocol into a two-round protocol that satisfies the standard notion of everlasting security.

Finally, we prove a no-go theorem which establishes that (in contrast to the case of ordinary multi-round QKD) entanglement is necessary for non-interactive QKD, i.e., the messages sent by Alice and Bob cannot both be unentangled with their respective quantum memories if the protocol is to be everlastingly secure.

Document type Conference contribution
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2510.00791 https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-032-12296-4_2
Downloads
2510.00791v1 (Accepted author manuscript)
978-3-032-12296-4_2 (Embargo up to 2026-06-03) (Final published version)
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