English

Using concatenated algebraic geometry codes in channel polarization

Information Theory 2013-11-11 v1 Algebraic Geometry math.IT

Abstract

Polar codes were introduced by Arikan in 2008 and are the first family of error-correcting codes achieving the symmetric capacity of an arbitrary binary-input discrete memoryless channel under low complexity encoding and using an efficient successive cancellation decoding strategy. Recently, non-binary polar codes have been studied, in which one can use different algebraic geometry codes to achieve better error decoding probability. In this paper, we study the performance of binary polar codes that are obtained from non-binary algebraic geometry codes using concatenation. For binary polar codes (i.e. binary kernels) of a given length nn, we compare numerically the use of short algebraic geometry codes over large fields versus long algebraic geometry codes over small fields. We find that for each nn there is an optimal choice. For binary kernels of size up to n1,800n \leq 1,800 a concatenated Reed-Solomon code outperforms other choices. For larger kernel sizes concatenated Hermitian codes or Suzuki codes will do better.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1310.7159,
  title  = {Using concatenated algebraic geometry codes in channel polarization},
  author = {Abdulla Eid and Iwan Duursma},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1310.7159},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

8 pages, 6 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T01:54:45.956Z