pith. sign in

arxiv: 1511.08435 · v3 · pith:22VNV2RRnew · submitted 2015-11-26 · 💻 cs.IT · math.CO· math.IT

Typical sumsets of linear codes

classification 💻 cs.IT math.COmath.IT
keywords codestypicalsumsetlinearmathcalsizethresholdasymptotic
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

Given two identical linear codes $\mathcal C$ over $\mathbb F_q$ of length $n$, we independently pick one codeword from each codebook uniformly at random. A $\textit{sumset}$ is formed by adding these two codewords entry-wise as integer vectors and a sumset is called $\textit{typical}$, if the sum falls inside this set with high probability. We ask the question: how large is the typical sumset for most codes? In this paper we characterize the asymptotic size of such typical sumset. We show that when the rate $R$ of the linear code is below a certain threshold $D$, the typical sumset size is roughly $|\mathcal C|^2=2^{2nR}$ for most codes while when $R$ is above this threshold, most codes have a typical sumset whose size is roughly $|\mathcal C|\cdot 2^{nD}=2^{n(R+D)}$ due to the linear structure of the codes. The threshold $D$ depends solely on the alphabet size $q$ and takes value in $[1/2, \log \sqrt{e})$. More generally, we completely characterize the asymptotic size of typical sumsets of two nested linear codes $\mathcal C_1, \mathcal C_2$ with different rates. As an application of the result, we study the communication problem where the integer sum of two codewords is to be decoded through a general two-user multiple-access channel.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.