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arxiv: 1703.01080 · v2 · pith:7RCTQHB5new · submitted 2017-03-03 · 💻 cs.IT · math.IT· math.NT· math.RT

Good cyclic codes and the uncertainty principle

classification 💻 cs.IT math.ITmath.NTmath.RT
keywords codescyclicgoodprincipleuncertaintyexistpointsome
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A long standing problem in the area of error correcting codes asks whether there exist good cyclic codes. Most of the known results point in the direction of a negative answer. The uncertainty principle is a classical result of harmonic analysis asserting that given a non-zero function $f$ on some abelian group, either $f$ or its Fourier transform $\hat{f}$ has large support. In this note, we observe a connection between these two subjects. We point out that even a weak version of the uncertainty principle for fields of positive characteristic would imply that good cyclic codes do exist. We also provide some heuristic arguments supporting that this is indeed the case.

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