55 research outputs found

    Evading Subspaces Over Large Fields and Explicit List-decodable Rank-metric Codes

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    We construct an explicit family of linear rank-metric codes over any field F that enables efficient list decoding up to a fraction rho of errors in the rank metric with a rate of 1-rho-eps, for any desired rho in (0,1) and eps > 0. Previously, a Monte Carlo construction of such codes was known, but this is in fact the first explicit construction of positive rate rank-metric codes for list decoding beyond the unique decoding radius. Our codes are explicit subcodes of the well-known Gabidulin codes, which encode linearized polynomials of low degree via their values at a collection of linearly independent points. The subcode is picked by restricting the message polynomials to an F-subspace that evades certain structured subspaces over an extension field of F. These structured spaces arise from the linear-algebraic list decoder for Gabidulin codes due to Guruswami and Xing (STOC\u2713). Our construction is obtained by combining subspace designs constructed by Guruswami and Kopparty (FOCS\u2713) with subspace-evasive varieties due to Dvir and Lovett (STOC\u2712). We establish a similar result for subspace codes, which are a collection of subspaces, every pair of which have low-dimensional intersection, and which have received much attention recently in the context of network coding. We also give explicit subcodes of folded Reed-Solomon (RS) codes with small folding order that are list-decodable (in the Hamming metric) with optimal redundancy, motivated by the fact that list decoding RS codes reduces to list decoding such folded RS codes. However, as we only list decode a subcode of these codes, the Johnson radius continues to be the best known error fraction for list decoding RS codes

    Bounds on List Decoding of Rank-Metric Codes

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    So far, there is no polynomial-time list decoding algorithm (beyond half the minimum distance) for Gabidulin codes. These codes can be seen as the rank-metric equivalent of Reed--Solomon codes. In this paper, we provide bounds on the list size of rank-metric codes in order to understand whether polynomial-time list decoding is possible or whether it works only with exponential time complexity. Three bounds on the list size are proven. The first one is a lower exponential bound for Gabidulin codes and shows that for these codes no polynomial-time list decoding beyond the Johnson radius exists. Second, an exponential upper bound is derived, which holds for any rank-metric code of length nn and minimum rank distance dd. The third bound proves that there exists a rank-metric code over \Fqm of length nmn \leq m such that the list size is exponential in the length for any radius greater than half the minimum rank distance. This implies that there cannot exist a polynomial upper bound depending only on nn and dd similar to the Johnson bound in Hamming metric. All three rank-metric bounds reveal significant differences to bounds for codes in Hamming metric.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, short version presented at ISIT 201

    On the List-Decodability of Random Linear Rank-Metric Codes

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    The list-decodability of random linear rank-metric codes is shown to match that of random rank-metric codes. Specifically, an Fq\mathbb{F}_q-linear rank-metric code over Fqm×n\mathbb{F}_q^{m \times n} of rate R=(1ρ)(1nmρ)εR = (1-\rho)(1-\frac{n}{m}\rho)-\varepsilon is shown to be (with high probability) list-decodable up to fractional radius ρ(0,1)\rho \in (0,1) with lists of size at most Cρ,qε\frac{C_{\rho,q}}{\varepsilon}, where Cρ,qC_{\rho,q} is a constant depending only on ρ\rho and qq. This matches the bound for random rank-metric codes (up to constant factors). The proof adapts the approach of Guruswami, H\aa stad, Kopparty (STOC 2010), who established a similar result for the Hamming metric case, to the rank-metric setting

    On the Geometry of Balls in the Grassmannian and List Decoding of Lifted Gabidulin Codes

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    The finite Grassmannian Gq(k,n)\mathcal{G}_{q}(k,n) is defined as the set of all kk-dimensional subspaces of the ambient space Fqn\mathbb{F}_{q}^{n}. Subsets of the finite Grassmannian are called constant dimension codes and have recently found an application in random network coding. In this setting codewords from Gq(k,n)\mathcal{G}_{q}(k,n) are sent through a network channel and, since errors may occur during transmission, the received words can possible lie in Gq(k,n)\mathcal{G}_{q}(k',n), where kkk'\neq k. In this paper, we study the balls in Gq(k,n)\mathcal{G}_{q}(k,n) with center that is not necessarily in Gq(k,n)\mathcal{G}_{q}(k,n). We describe the balls with respect to two different metrics, namely the subspace and the injection metric. Moreover, we use two different techniques for describing these balls, one is the Pl\"ucker embedding of Gq(k,n)\mathcal{G}_{q}(k,n), and the second one is a rational parametrization of the matrix representation of the codewords. With these results, we consider the problem of list decoding a certain family of constant dimension codes, called lifted Gabidulin codes. We describe a way of representing these codes by linear equations in either the matrix representation or a subset of the Pl\"ucker coordinates. The union of these equations and the equations which arise from the description of the ball of a given radius in the Grassmannian describe the list of codewords with distance less than or equal to the given radius from the received word.Comment: To be published in Designs, Codes and Cryptography (Springer
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