Ying Xu, Xiaoni Du, Meichun Jia, Xiangyu Wang, Jian Zou
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
E2 algorithm is one of the 15 candidate algorithms in the first round of AES collection. In this paper, taking E2-128 as an example, the quantum security analysis on E2 algorithm is proposed for the first time in quantum chosen-plaintext attack setting. First, a polynomial-time distinguisher on 4-round E2-128 is constructed with \(2^{12.1}\) quantum queries by taking the properties of the internal round function into consideration. Then, by extending the distinguisher 2 rounds backward, a 6-round quantum key recovery attack is achieved with the help of Grover-meet-Simon algorithm, whose time complexities gain a factor of \(2^{76}\), where the subkey length that can be recovered is 152 bits with the occupation of 560 qubits. Furthermore, when attacking \(r>6\) rounds, \(152+(r-6)\times 128\)-bit subkey needs to be guessed in time \(2^{76+(r-6)\times 64}\), which is \(\frac{1}{2^{52}}\) of Grover’s quantum brute force search. Finally, we present a quantum attack against E2-128 with \({2^{88.1}}\) quantum queries by taking initial transformation and terminal transformation into consideration. The result shows that the time complexity of the quantum attack is significantly reduced, and E2 algorithm is safe enough to resist quantum attack.
期刊介绍:
Quantum Information Processing is a high-impact, international journal publishing cutting-edge experimental and theoretical research in all areas of Quantum Information Science. Topics of interest include quantum cryptography and communications, entanglement and discord, quantum algorithms, quantum error correction and fault tolerance, quantum computer science, quantum imaging and sensing, and experimental platforms for quantum information. Quantum Information Processing supports and inspires research by providing a comprehensive peer review process, and broadcasting high quality results in a range of formats. These include original papers, letters, broadly focused perspectives, comprehensive review articles, book reviews, and special topical issues. The journal is particularly interested in papers detailing and demonstrating quantum information protocols for cryptography, communications, computation, and sensing.