The Degraded Discrete-Time Poisson Wiretap Channel

Abstract

This paper addresses the degraded discrete-time Poisson wiretap channel (DT--PWC) in an optical wireless communication system based on intensity modulation and direct detection. Subject to nonnegativity, peak- and average-intensity as well as bandwidth constraints, we study the secrecy-capacity-achieving input distribution of this wiretap channel and prove it to be unique and discrete with a finite number of mass points; one of them located at the origin. Furthermore, we establish that every point on the boundary of the rate-equivocation region of this wiretap channel is also obtained by a unique and discrete input distribution with finitely many mass points. In general, the number of mass points of the optimal distributions is greater than two. This is in contrast with the degraded continuous-time PWC when the signaling bandwidth is not restricted and where the secrecy capacity and the entire boundary of the rate-equivocation region are achieved by binary distributions. Furthermore, we extend our analysis to the case where only an average-intensity constraint is active. For this case, we find that the secrecy capacity and the entire boundary of the rate-equivocation region are attained by discrete distributions with countably infinite number of mass points, but with finitely many mass points in any bounded interval.

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