Jump to content

Srivastava code

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In coding theory, Srivastava codes, formulated by Professor J. N. Srivastava, form a class of parameterised error-correcting codes which are a special case of alternant codes.

Definition

[edit]

The original Srivastava code over GF(q) of length n is defined by a parity check matrix H of alternant form

where the αi and zi are elements of GF(qm)

Properties

[edit]

The parameters of this code are length n, dimension ≥ n  ms and minimum distance ≥ s + 1.

[edit]

The symmetry properties of Srivastava-code parity-check matrices have been used to construct binary codes, including a construction that generalizes Goppa's construction.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. Sugiyama, Yasuo; Kasahara, Masao; Hirasawa, Shigeichi; Namekawa, Toshihiko (September 1975). "Some efficient binary codes constructed using Srivastava codes". IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. 21 (5): 581–582. doi:10.1109/TIT.1975.1055426. ISSN 0018-9448.