Ruhr-Uni-Bochum

Concrete quantum cryptanalysis of binary elliptic curves

2021

Konferenz / Journal

Autor*innen

Tanja Lange Maya-Iggy van Hoof Daniel Bernstein Gustavo Banegas

Research Hub

Research Hub A: Kryptographie der Zukunft
Research Hub B: Eingebettete Sicherheit

Research Challenges

RC 2: Quantum-Resistant Cryptography

Abstract

This paper analyzes and optimizes quantum circuits for computing discrete logarithms on binary elliptic curves, including reversible circuits for fixed-base-point scalar multiplication and the full stack of relevant subroutines. The main optimization target is the size of the quantum computer, i.e., the number of logical qubits required, as this appears to be the main obstacle to implementing Shor’s polynomial-time discrete-logarithm algorithm. The secondary optimization target is the number of logical Toffoli gates.
For an elliptic curve over a field of 2n elements, this paper reduces the number of qubits to 7n + blog2(n)c + 9. At the same time this paper reduces the number of Toffoli gates to 48n3 + 8nlog2(3)+1 + 352n2 log2(n) + 512n2 + O(nlog2 (3)) with double-and-add scalar multiplication, and a logarithmic factor smaller with fixed-window scalar multiplication. The number of CNOT gates is also O(n3). Exact gate counts are given for various sizes of elliptic curves currently used for cryptography.

Tags

Post-Quantum Cryptography
Asymmetric Cryptography
Cryptanalysis