Some connections between self-dual codes, combinatorial designs and secret sharing schemes (Q2275872): Difference between revisions
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scientific article
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English | Some connections between self-dual codes, combinatorial designs and secret sharing schemes |
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Some connections between self-dual codes, combinatorial designs and secret sharing schemes (English)
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10 August 2011
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Let \(C= C^\bot\) be a binary self-dual code. It is doubly-even if each vector is of weight divisible by 4. If \(C\) is not doubly-even then it is called singly-even. Let \(C_0\) be the doubly-even subcode of a singly-even \(C\), then \(C^\bot_0\setminus C\) is called the shadow of \(C\). The authors establish that the singly-even binary self-dual codes with parameters \([24m+ 2, 12m+ 1, 4m+ 2]\) and \([24m+ 18, 12m+ 9, 4m+ 4]\) having a shadow of minimum weight 1 have uniquely determined weight enumerators. From some of these codes the authors make use of the Assmus-Mattson theorem to produce 2- and 1-designs. Using these, they describe one-part and two-part secret-sharing schemes.
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self-dual codes
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secret-sharing schemes
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combinatorial designs
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