Quantum Cryptography and Side Channel Attacks Dr. Brandon Rodenburg is a Senior Physicist and Quantum Information Scientist in MITRE's Physical Sciences, Nanosystems, & Quantum group at Princeton. He graduated college from Creighton University with a B.S. in physics, as well as B.S. major in mathematics. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Rochester's Institute of Optics, where he worked in experimental quantum optics studying the generation, propagation, and state discrimination of structured beams of light for applications in quantum information and communication. After finishing his graduate research, Dr. Rodenburg became a postdoctoral researcher working in the field of theoretical quantum optomechanics at the Rochester Institute of Technology. There he developed a quantum model of levitated nanoparticles and demonstrated that such systems could exhibit nonclassical features which provided a completely new platform within quantum information science which may be exploited for such applications as quantum information processing or extremely sensitive force measurements. Dr. Rodenburg joined the MITRE Quantum Information Science group in the summer of 2016 and has been working to expand the depth and breadth of research both within quantum information and in a variety of other areas that are of importance to MITRE's sponsors. Dr. Daniel Stack is currently a Senior Research Scientist with Honeywell's Advanced Connected Sustainable Technologies Laboratory. Previously he has held positions at MITRE and as an ORAU Postdoctoral Fellow at the US Army Research Laboratory. In 2012 he received his Ph.D. in physics from Stony Brook University under the guidance of Distinguished Teaching Professor Harold Metcalf. His research interests include Quantum Optics and the laser cooling of atoms for Quantum Information Processing. Colin Lualdi received his A.B. in Physics from Princeton University in 2017. From 2015 to 2017 he worked as an intern for the Quantum Information Science group at the MITRE Corporation. He is currently pursuing his PhD in Physics at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. His research interests are primarily in the area of experimental photonic quantum information. HKN.ORG 29http://www.HKN.ORG