At the same time, if Bob randomly uses either a polariser for diagonal polarisations or an alternative polariser that works in the horizontal/vertical direction (it is important for Bob to keep in memory every choice made and the state of polarisation that he measures) then, looking at the result, one sees that the probability of a random result is 50%, as it is the probability of using the wrong analyser. After exchange and transmission of photons with at least twice the number of bits as the final key, Bob discloses to Alice using the public channel the series of analysers that were used by him (however, without its results). In the next step, Alice performs a comparison of Bob's received sequence and returns information regarding the mapping between bits and photons that were sent by Alice. In this way, the shared key is composed of only compatible bits.
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