Publication | Closed Access
Low-density parity-check codes based on finite geometries: a rediscovery and new results
1.3K
Citations
53
References
2001
Year
EngineeringError Control TechniqueIterative DecodingFormal VerificationLdpc CodesNew ResultsPolar CodesLow-density Parity-checkDiscrete MathematicsCoding TheoryComputational GeometryVariable-length CodeComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceLow-density Parity-check CodesError Correction CodeCryptographyFinite-geometry Ldpc CodesFinite Geometries
This paper presents a geometric approach to the construction of low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes. Four classes of LDPC codes are constructed based on the lines and points of Euclidean and projective geometries over finite fields. Codes of these four classes have good minimum distances and their Tanner (1981) graphs have girth 6. Finite-geometry LDPC codes can be decoded in various ways, ranging from low to high decoding complexity and from reasonably good to very good performance. They perform very well with iterative decoding. Furthermore, they can be put in either cyclic or quasi-cyclic form. Consequently, their encoding can be achieved in linear time and implemented with simple feedback shift registers. This advantage is not shared by other LDPC codes in general and is important in practice. Finite-geometry LDPC codes can be extended and shortened in various ways to obtain other good LDPC codes. Several techniques of extension and shortening are presented. Long extended finite-geometry LDPC codes have been constructed and they achieve a performance only a few tenths of a decibel away from the Shannon theoretical limit with iterative decoding.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1