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Published November 2014 | Submitted
Journal Article Open

Quantum Synchronizable Codes From Finite Geometries

Abstract

Quantum synchronizable error-correcting codes are special quantum error-correcting codes that are designed to correct both the effect of quantum noise on qubits and misalignment in block synchronization. It is known that, in principle, such a code can be constructed through a combination of a classical linear code and its subcode if the two are both cyclic and dual-containing. However, finding such classical codes that lead to promising quantum synchronizable error-correcting codes is not a trivial task. In fact, although there are two families of classical codes that are proved to produce quantum synchronizable codes with good minimum distances and highest possible tolerance against misalignment, their code lengths have been restricted to primes and Mersenne numbers. In this paper, examining the incidence vectors of projective spaces over the finite fields of characteristic 2, we give quantum synchronizable codes from cyclic codes whose lengths are not primes or Mersenne numbers. These projective geometric codes achieve good performance in quantum error correction and possess the best possible ability to recover synchronization, thereby enriching the variety of good quantum synchronizable codes. We also extend the current knowledge of cyclic codes in classical coding theory by explicitly giving generator polynomials of the finite geometric codes and completely characterizing the minimum weight nonzero codewords. In addition to the codes based on projective spaces, we carry out a similar analysis on the well-known cyclic codes from Euclidean spaces that are known to be majority logic decodable and determine their exact minimum distances.

Additional Information

© 2014 IEEE. Manuscript received December 15, 2013; revised May 14, 2014; accepted September 5, 2014. Date of publication September 10, 2014; date of current version October 16, 2014. Y. Fujiwara was supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science. P. Vandendriessche was supported in part by the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) and in part by a Ph.D. Fellowship of FWO. The authors thank the anonymous reviewers and Associate Editor Alexei Ashikhmin for careful reading of the manuscript and constructive suggestions.

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