Duality on group algebras over finite chain rings: applications to additive group codes
By: Maryam Bajalan , Javier de la Cruz , Alexandre Fotue Tabue and more
Potential Business Impact:
Makes computer codes more efficient for sending data.
Given a finite group $G$ and an extension of finite chain rings $S|R$, one can consider the group rings $\mathscr{S} = S[G]$ and $\mathscr{R} = R[G]$. The group ring $\mathscr{S}$ can be viewed as an $R$-bimodule, and any of its $R$-submodules naturally inherits an $R$-bimodule structure; in the framework of coding theory, these are called \emph{additive group codes}, more precisely a (left) additive group code of is a linear code which is the image of a (left) ideal of a group algebra via an isomorphism which maps $G$ to the standard basis of $S^n$, where $n=|G|$. In the first part of the paper, the ring extension $S|R$ is studied, and several $R$-module isomorphisms are established for decomposing group rings, thereby providing a characterization of the structure of additive group codes. In the second part, we construct a symmetric, nondegenerate trace-Euclidean inner product on $\mathscr{S}$. Two additive group codes $\mathcal{C}$ and $\mathcal{D}$ form an \emph{additive complementary pair} (ACP) if $\mathcal{C} + \mathcal{D} = \mathscr{S}$ and $\mathcal{C} \cap \mathcal{D} = \{0\}$. For two-sided ACPs, we prove that the orthogonal complement of one code under the trace-Euclidean duality is precisely the image of the other under an involutive anti-automorphism of $\mathscr{S}$, linking coding-theoretical ACPs with module orthogonal direct-sum decompositions, representation theory, and the structure of group algebras over finite chain rings.
Similar Papers
Trace duality and additive complementary pairs of additive cyclic codes over finite chain rings
Information Theory
Makes computer codes stronger for better data protection.
$\mathbb{F}_{2}\mathbb{F}_{4}$-Additive Complementary Dual Codes
Information Theory
Makes better codes for sending information safely.
On polycyclic linear and additive codes associated to a trinomial over a finite chain ring
Information Theory
Simplifies complex math for better computer codes.