Quadratic residue code

A quadratic residue code is a type of cyclic code.

Examples edit

Examples of quadratic residue codes include the   Hamming code over  , the   binary Golay code over   and the   ternary Golay code over  .

Constructions edit

There is a quadratic residue code of length   over the finite field   whenever   and   are primes,   is odd, and   is a quadratic residue modulo  . Its generator polynomial as a cyclic code is given by

 

where   is the set of quadratic residues of   in the set   and   is a primitive  th root of unity in some finite extension field of  . The condition that   is a quadratic residue of   ensures that the coefficients of   lie in  . The dimension of the code is  . Replacing   by another primitive  -th root of unity   either results in the same code or an equivalent code, according to whether or not   is a quadratic residue of  .

An alternative construction avoids roots of unity. Define

 

for a suitable  . When   choose   to ensure that  . If   is odd, choose  , where   or   according to whether   is congruent to   or   modulo  . Then   also generates a quadratic residue code; more precisely the ideal of   generated by   corresponds to the quadratic residue code.

Weight edit

The minimum weight of a quadratic residue code of length   is greater than  ; this is the square root bound.

Extended code edit

Adding an overall parity-check digit to a quadratic residue code gives an extended quadratic residue code. When   (mod  ) an extended quadratic residue code is self-dual; otherwise it is equivalent but not equal to its dual. By the Gleason–Prange theorem (named for Andrew Gleason and Eugene Prange), the automorphism group of an extended quadratic residue code has a subgroup which is isomorphic to either   or  .

Decoding Method edit

Since late 1980, there are many algebraic decoding algorithms were developed for correcting errors on quadratic residue codes. These algorithms can achieve the (true) error-correcting capacity   of the quadratic residue codes with the code length up to 113. However, decoding of long binary quadratic residue codes and non-binary quadratic residue codes continue to be a challenge. Currently, decoding quadratic residue codes is still an active research area in the theory of error-correcting code.

References edit

  • F. J. MacWilliams and N. J. A. Sloane, The Theory of Error-Correcting Codes, North-Holland Publishing Co., Amsterdam-New York-Oxford, 1977.
  • Blahut, R. E. (September 2006), "The Gleason-Prange theorem", IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory, 37 (5), Piscataway, NJ, USA: IEEE Press: 1269–1273, doi:10.1109/18.133245.
  • M. Elia, Algebraic decoding of the (23,12,7) Golay code, IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, Volume: 33, Issue: 1, pg. 150-151, January 1987.
  • Reed, I.S., Yin, X., Truong, T.K., Algebraic decoding of the (32, 16, 8) quadratic residue code. IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory 36(4), 876–880 (1990)
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  • Higgs, R.J., Humphreys, J.F.: Decoding the ternary (23, 12, 8) quadratic-residue code. IEE Proc., Comm. 142(3), 129–134 (June 1995)
  • He, R., Reed, I.S., Truong, T.K., Chen, X., Decoding the (47, 24, 11) quadratic residue code. IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory 47(3), 1181–1186 (2001)
  • ….
  • Y. Li, Y. Duan, H. C. Chang, H. Liu, T. K. Truong, Using the difference of syndromes to decode quadratic residue codes, IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory 64(7), 5179-5190 (2018)