Kangaroo Methods for Solving the Interval Discrete Logarithm Problem

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Publication:6258552

arXiv1501.07019MaRDI QIDQ6258552FDOQ6258552


Authors: Alex J. Fowler, Steven D. Galbraith Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 28 January 2015

Abstract: The interval discrete logarithm problem is defined as follows: Given some g,h in a group G, and some NinmathbbN such that gz=h for some z where 0leqz<N, find z. At the moment, kangaroo methods are the best low memory algorithm to solve the interval discrete logarithm problem. The fastest non parallelised kangaroo methods to solve this problem are the three kangaroo method, and the four kangaroo method. These respectively have expected average running times of , and group operations. It is currently an open question as to whether it is possible to improve kangaroo methods by using more than four kangaroos. Before this dissertation, the fastest kangaroo method that used more than four kangaroos required at least 2sqrtN group operations to solve the interval discrete logarithm problem. In this thesis, I improve the running time of methods that use more than four kangaroos significantly, and almost beat the fastest kangaroo algorithm, by presenting a seven kangaroo method with an expected average running time of group operations. The question, 'Are five kangaroos worse than three?' is also answered in this thesis, as I propose a five kangaroo algorithm that requires on average group operations to solve the interval discrete logarithm problem.




Has companion code repository: https://github.com/jeanlucpons/kangaroo









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