Recent research in ultra-reliable and low latency communications (URLLC) for
future wireless systems has spurred interest in short block-length codes. In
this context, we introduce a new class of high-dimension constant curvature
curves codes for analog error correction of independent continuous-alphabet
uniform sources. In particular, we employ the circumradius function from knot
theory to prescribe insulating tubes about the centerline of constant curvature
curves. We then use tube packing density within a hypersphere to optimize the
curve parameters. The resulting constant curvature curve tube (C3T) codes
possess the smallest possible latency -- block-length is unity under bandwidth
expansion mapping. Further, the codes provide within 5 dB of Shannon's
optimal performance theoretically achievable at the lower range of
signal-to-noise ratios and BW expansion factors. We exploit the fact that the
C3T encoder locus is a geodesic on a flat torus in even dimensions and a
generalized helix in odd dimensions to obtain useful code properties and
provide noise-reducing projections at the decoder stage. We validate the
performance of these codes using fully connected multi-layer perceptrons that
approximate maximum likelihood decoders. For the case of independent and
identically distributed uniform sources, we show that analog error correction
is advantageous over digital coding in terms of required block-lengths needed
to match {signal-to-noise ratio, source-to-distortion ratio} tuples. The best
possible digital codes require two to three orders of magnitude higher latency
compared to C3T codes, thereby demonstrating the latter's utility for URLLC.Comment: 11 pages, 2 tables, 6 figure