Elliptic Curve Money Scheme Analysis Gains Speed via Division Polynomials

The challenge of creating unforgeable money has long driven cryptographic research, recently manifesting in schemes based on the principles of quantum mechanics and the complex mathematics of elliptic curves. Hyeonhak Kim, Donghoe Heo, and Seokhie Hong, all from the School of Cybersecurity at Korea University, present a detailed analysis of these ‘quantum money’ systems, focusing on vulnerabilities in how they are constructed. Their work demonstrates a significant improvement in the speed of attacking these schemes, achieving a four-fold logarithmic advantage over previous methods by efficiently calculating division polynomials using rational points on the curves. While forging a banknote remains computationally difficult, this research importantly reveals a pathway to more efficient attacks and, counterintuitively, also provides a faster method for verifying the authenticity of the quantum money itself, offering valuable insights for the future development of secure, elliptic-curve-based cryptographic systems.

Isogenies and Rational Points for Quantum Money

This paper explores a detailed approach to quantum money and related cryptographic attacks, focusing on a scheme based on isogenies of elliptic curves, creating banknotes difficult to counterfeit due to the disturbance caused by any attempt to copy their quantum state. The central innovation lies in using rational points on elliptic curves to efficiently compute cryptographic properties, specifically related to the order of the elliptic curve group. Leveraging quadratic twists improves computational efficiency, and the team presents a new attack method exploiting rational points to reduce the computational complexity of finding a valid banknote. They also propose a faster verification algorithm based on the same principles.

The primary contribution is a new attack on the isogeny-based quantum money scheme, faster than previous approaches due to its use of rational points and quadratic twists. This work also presents a faster verification algorithm, and provides a detailed complexity analysis demonstrating the new approach’s efficiency, with practical implications for the security of these schemes. By replacing the computationally expensive process of counting points on an elliptic curve with a more efficient computation using rational points, the team simplifies certain calculations related to the order of the group, allowing for a faster attack and verification. The approach offers significant efficiency improvements, mathematical rigor, and practical relevance to quantum money security, with novelty through the use of rational points. Further research should investigate potential side-channel attacks, quantum resistance, the impact of class number dependence, and the potential for generalizing this approach to other cryptographic schemes.

Quantum Forgery Analysis Using Elliptic Curve Division

Researchers developed a novel approach to assess the security of a recently proposed quantum money scheme, focusing on the practical challenges of forging banknotes. Their methodology exploits the efficiency of evaluating division polynomials with rational points on elliptic curves, offering a significant speedup compared to traditional point-counting algorithms. This allows for a more detailed and computationally feasible exploration of potential attacks. The team identified that constructing a superposition of elliptic curves was inefficient, and concentrated on a strategy leveraging quantum search techniques, crucially avoiding the computationally expensive point-counting algorithm.

Instead of directly counting rational points, the method focuses on verifying their order, a demonstrably faster process. Interestingly, the researchers discovered a connection between the attack strategy and the verification process, revealing that optimizations developed for forgery could also be applied to enhance the speed and efficiency of verifying the banknote’s authenticity. By focusing on rational points and division polynomials, the team was able to provide a more concrete estimation of the quantum resources required for a successful attack, and to demonstrate a substantial improvement in verification speed compared to previous methods.

Rational Point Cryptography Secures Quantum Money

Advancing Quantum Money with Rational Point Cryptography Researchers have made significant progress in understanding the security of a novel approach to quantum money, a system designed to prevent counterfeiting using the principles of quantum mechanics. This work focuses on a specific implementation that relies on the unique properties of elliptic curves and a mathematical technique involving “class group actions. ” Quantum money aims to leverage the no-cloning theorem to create inherently unforgeable currency. Previous schemes faced challenges in verifying the authenticity of the money. This new approach utilizes the cardinality, essentially the number of points, on elliptic curves as a serial number for each banknote.

The research team has developed a new method for attempting to forge these quantum banknotes, offering a substantial improvement over previous brute-force attacks. By efficiently calculating division polynomials with rational points on the curves, they achieve a speedup of approximately a factor of log⁴p, where ‘p’ represents a large prime number crucial to the cryptographic system. Interestingly, the team discovered a surprising connection between the attack strategy and the verification process. Their optimized forgery method also leads to a more efficient way to verify the authenticity of a banknote, with the verification process now operating with the same log⁴p speedup. The researchers demonstrate that their attack requires fewer qubits than previous approaches, reducing the quantum resources needed by a factor of log p. This advancement represents a step towards realizing the practical potential of quantum money and securing future financial transactions.

Isogeny-Based Quantum Money Forgery and Verification

This research presents a new method for attacking a specific quantum money scheme based on isogenies and elliptic curves. The team demonstrates a cryptanalytic approach that leverages the efficient evaluation of division polynomials using rational points on these curves, achieving a speedup of O(log⁴p) compared to brute-force attacks. Importantly, the research also yields a more efficient verification algorithm, directly derived from their attack method, which exploits the properties of quadratic twists. The authors acknowledge that their approach remains computationally intensive, but anticipate that it represents a significant improvement in the feasibility of forging quantum banknotes within this system.

👉 More information
🗞 Cryptanalysis of Isogeny-Based Quantum Money with Rational Points
🧠 ArXiv: https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.00351

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