Maximal quadrics over finite fields and minimal codewords of projective Reed-Muller codes
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 06:53 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Two absolutely irreducible quadrics over a finite field must coincide as varieties if one set of rational points contains the other, except one case over F2.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Except for one particular case over F2, any two absolutely irreducible quadrics over a finite field whose sets of rational points are contained within one another must be equal as projective varieties. This yields a precise characterisation of the minimal codewords of projective Reed-Muller codes of order 2 together with their exact counts for each weight.
What carries the argument
The equivalence that identifies minimal codewords of projective Reed-Muller codes of order 2 with quadrics having maximal rational-point sets under inclusion, combined with the uniqueness theorem for absolutely irreducible quadrics.
If this is right
- Minimal codewords of the projective Reed-Muller code of order 2 are in bijection with these maximal quadrics.
- The exact number of minimal codewords is known for every admissible weight.
- The classification holds over every finite field, with the single listed exception over F2 handled separately.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The uniqueness result may simplify weight-distribution calculations for related algebraic codes.
- Similar containment arguments could apply to higher-degree hypersurfaces whose rational points determine the variety.
- The geometric criterion offers a test that could be implemented in computer-algebra systems to enumerate minimal codewords for small fields and dimensions.
Load-bearing premise
The quadrics are absolutely irreducible and the containment of rational points is taken with respect to the given finite field.
What would settle it
Exhibit two distinct absolutely irreducible quadrics over any finite field larger than F2 such that the rational points of one are properly contained in those of the other.
Figures
read the original abstract
We study the classification of minimal codewords of projective Reed-Muller codes of order $2$. This problem is equivalent to identifying quadrics over finite fields whose set of rational points is maximal with respect to the inclusion. We prove that except one particular case over $\mathbb{F}_2$, any two absolutely irreducible quadrics whose sets of rational points are contained within one another should be equal as projective varieties. We deduce a precise characterisation of the minimal codewords of projective Reed-Muller codes of order $2$ and further give their exact number for each possible weight.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript proves that, except for one explicit case over F_2, any two absolutely irreducible quadrics over a finite field whose F_q-rational point sets are nested under inclusion must coincide as projective varieties. This geometric statement is shown to be equivalent to the classification of minimal codewords in the projective Reed-Muller code of order 2; the authors then deduce an exact characterization of these codewords together with their number for each attainable weight.
Significance. The result supplies a parameter-free geometric criterion that directly yields the minimal supports and their multiplicities in PRM codes of order 2. The explicit handling of the single F_2 exception and the translation from quadric containment to codeword weight are strengths that make the classification complete and falsifiable.
minor comments (2)
- The abstract states the main theorem cleanly, but the precise definition of 'maximal with respect to the inclusion' (i.e., maximality of the point set) should be restated once in the introduction for readers who enter via the coding-theoretic side.
- In the application to Reed-Muller codes, the correspondence between the support of a codeword and the zero set of a quadratic form is used without an explicit small-field example; adding one (e.g., q=3 or q=4) would improve readability.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive and accurate summary of our manuscript, including the recognition of the geometric criterion for nested rational point sets on absolutely irreducible quadrics and the explicit treatment of the single F_2 exception. We appreciate the assessment that this yields a complete classification of minimal codewords in projective Reed-Muller codes of order 2.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity detected
full rationale
The paper equates the classification of minimal codewords in projective Reed-Muller codes of order 2 with the identification of quadrics maximal under inclusion of F_q-rational points. It then proves directly, via case analysis on quadratic forms and handling of the single F_2 exception, that absolutely irreducible quadrics are uniquely determined by their point sets under inclusion. This uniqueness is established from first principles in algebraic geometry over finite fields and is not obtained by fitting parameters, self-definition, or load-bearing self-citations; the codeword characterization follows immediately as a translation of the geometric result without circular reduction to the inputs.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Absolutely irreducible quadrics over finite fields have well-defined rational point sets that behave under inclusion.
Reference graph
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