Correctness of Extended RSA Public Key Cryptosystem
By: Dar-jen Chang, Suranjan Gautam
Potential Business Impact:
Makes secret codes stronger and more reliable.
This paper proposes an alternative approach to formally establishing the correctness of the RSA public key cryptosystem. The methodology presented herein deviates slightly from conventional proofs found in existing literature. Specifically, this study explores the conditions under which the choice of the positive integer N, a fundamental component of RSA, can be extended beyond the standard selection criteria. We derive explicit conditions that determine when certain values of N are valid for the encryption scheme and explain why others may fail to satisfy the correctness requirements. The scope of this paper is limited to the mathematical proof of correctness for RSA-like schemes, deliberately omitting issues related to the cryptographic security of RSA.
Similar Papers
When RSA Fails: Exploiting Prime Selection Vulnerabilities in Public Key Cryptography
Cryptography and Security
Cracks secret codes by finding weak math numbers.
Equilibrium SAT based PQC: New aegis against quantum computing
Cryptography and Security
Makes secret messages faster and safer from hackers.
Practical Challenges in Executing Shor's Algorithm on Existing Quantum Platforms
Quantum Physics
Quantum computers can't break secret codes yet.