1,503 research outputs found
Research Letter Design LDPC Codes without Cycles of Length 4 and 6
We present an approach for constructing LDPC codes without cycles of length 4 and 6. Firstly, we design 3 submatrices with different shifting functions given by the proposed schemes, then combine them into the matrix specified by the proposed approach, and, finally, expand the matrix into a desired parity-check matrix using identity matrices and cyclic shift matrices of the identity matrices. The simulation result in AWGN channel verifies that the BER of the proposed code is close to those of Mackay's random codes and Tanner's QC codes, and the good BER performance of the proposed can remain at high code rates
Design and Analysis of Time-Invariant SC-LDPC Convolutional Codes With Small Constraint Length
In this paper, we deal with time-invariant spatially coupled low-density
parity-check convolutional codes (SC-LDPC-CCs). Classic design approaches
usually start from quasi-cyclic low-density parity-check (QC-LDPC) block codes
and exploit suitable unwrapping procedures to obtain SC-LDPC-CCs. We show that
the direct design of the SC-LDPC-CCs syndrome former matrix or, equivalently,
the symbolic parity-check matrix, leads to codes with smaller syndrome former
constraint lengths with respect to the best solutions available in the
literature. We provide theoretical lower bounds on the syndrome former
constraint length for the most relevant families of SC-LDPC-CCs, under
constraints on the minimum length of cycles in their Tanner graphs. We also
propose new code design techniques that approach or achieve such theoretical
limits.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on
Communication
Hierarchical and High-Girth QC LDPC Codes
We present a general approach to designing capacity-approaching high-girth
low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes that are friendly to hardware
implementation. Our methodology starts by defining a new class of
"hierarchical" quasi-cyclic (HQC) LDPC codes that generalizes the structure of
quasi-cyclic (QC) LDPC codes. Whereas the parity check matrices of QC LDPC
codes are composed of circulant sub-matrices, those of HQC LDPC codes are
composed of a hierarchy of circulant sub-matrices that are in turn constructed
from circulant sub-matrices, and so on, through some number of levels. We show
how to map any class of codes defined using a protograph into a family of HQC
LDPC codes. Next, we present a girth-maximizing algorithm that optimizes the
degrees of freedom within the family of codes to yield a high-girth HQC LDPC
code. Finally, we discuss how certain characteristics of a code protograph will
lead to inevitable short cycles, and show that these short cycles can be
eliminated using a "squashing" procedure that results in a high-girth QC LDPC
code, although not a hierarchical one. We illustrate our approach with designed
examples of girth-10 QC LDPC codes obtained from protographs of one-sided
spatially-coupled codes.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information THeor
Time-Invariant Spatially Coupled Low-Density Parity-Check Codes with Small Constraint Length
We consider a special family of SC-LDPC codes, that is, time-invariant LDPCC
codes, which are known in the literature for a long time. Codes of this kind
are usually designed by starting from QC block codes, and applying suitable
unwrapping procedures. We show that, by directly designing the LDPCC code
syndrome former matrix without the constraints of the underlying QC block code,
it is possible to achieve smaller constraint lengths with respect to the best
solutions available in the literature. We also find theoretical lower bounds on
the syndrome former constraint length for codes with a specified minimum length
of the local cycles in their Tanner graphs. For this purpose, we exploit a new
approach based on a numerical representation of the syndrome former matrix,
which generalizes over a technique we already used to study a special subclass
of the codes here considered.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to be presented at IEEE BlackSeaCom 201
Design of Non-Binary Quasi-Cyclic LDPC Codes by ACE Optimization
An algorithm for constructing Tanner graphs of non-binary irregular
quasi-cyclic LDPC codes is introduced. It employs a new method for selection of
edge labels allowing control over the code's non-binary ACE spectrum and
resulting in low error-floor. The efficiency of the algorithm is demonstrated
by generating good codes of short to moderate length over small fields,
outperforming codes generated by the known methods.Comment: Accepted to 2013 IEEE Information Theory Worksho
Progressive Differences Convolutional Low-Density Parity-Check Codes
We present a new family of low-density parity-check (LDPC) convolutional
codes that can be designed using ordered sets of progressive differences. We
study their properties and define a subset of codes in this class that have
some desirable features, such as fixed minimum distance and Tanner graphs
without short cycles. The design approach we propose ensures that these
properties are guaranteed independently of the code rate. This makes these
codes of interest in many practical applications, particularly when high rate
codes are needed for saving bandwidth. We provide some examples of coded
transmission schemes exploiting this new class of codes.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in IEEE Communications
Letters. Copyright transferred to IEE
Adaptively correcting quantum errors with entanglement
Contrary to the assumption that most quantum error-correcting codes (QECC)
make, it is expected that phase errors are much more likely than bit errors in
physical devices. By employing the entanglement-assisted stabilizer formalism,
we develop a new kind of error-correcting protocol which can flexibly trade
error correction abilities between the two types of errors, such that high
error correction performance is achieved both in symmetric and in asymmetric
situations. The characteristics of the QECCs can be optimized in an adaptive
manner during information transmission. The proposed entanglement-assisted
QECCs require only one ebit regardless of the degree of asymmetry at a given
moment and can be decoded in polynomial time.Comment: 5 pages, final submission to ISIT 2011, Saint-Petersburg, Russi
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