English

Algebraic Expander Codes

Information Theory 2026-03-27 v1 math.IT

Abstract

Expander (Tanner) codes combine sparse graphs with local constraints, enabling linear-time decoding and asymptotically good distance--rate tradeoffs. A standard constraint-counting argument yields the global-rate lower bound R2r1R\ge 2r-1 for a Tanner code with local rate rr, which gives no positive-rate guarantee in the low-rate regime r1/2r\le 1/2. This regime is nonetheless important in applications that require algebraic local constraints (e.g., Reed--Solomon locality and the Schur-product/multiplication property). We introduce \emph{Algebraic Expander Codes}, an explicit algebraic family of Tanner-type codes whose local constraints are Reed--Solomon and whose global rate remains bounded away from 00 for every fixed r(0,1)r\in(0,1) (in particular, for r1/2r\le 1/2), while achieving constant relative distance. Our codes are defined by evaluating a structured subspace of polynomials on an orbit of a non-commutative subgroup of AGL(1,F)\mathrm{AGL}(1,\mathbb{F}) generated by translations and scalings. The resulting sparse coset geometry forms a strong spectral expander, proved via additive character-sum estimates, while the rate analysis uses a new notion of polynomial degree and a polytope-volume/dimension-counting argument.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2603.24788,
  title  = {Algebraic Expander Codes},
  author = {Swastik Kopparty and Itzhak Tamo},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2603.24788},
  year   = {2026}
}