Linear code: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
Examples: copyedits
Moved an entire section to another article (Block codes) - It does not belong specifically to Linear codes
Line 39:
Binary linear codes (refer to formal definition above) are ubiquitous in electronic devices and digital storage media. For example the [[Reed-Solomon error correction|Reed-Solomon code]] is used to store digital data on a [[compact disc]].
 
==Sphere packings and lattices==
 
Block codes are tied to the [[sphere packing problem]] which has received some attention over the years. In two dimensions, it is easy to visualize. Take a bunch of pennies flat on the table and push them together. The result is a hexagon pattern like a bee's nest. But block codes rely on more dimensions which cannot easily be visualized. The powerful Golay code used in deep space communications uses 24 dimensions. If used as a binary code (which it usually is,) the dimensions refer to the length of the codeword as defined above.
 
The theory of coding uses the ''N''-dimensional sphere model. For example, how many pennies can be packed into a circle on a tabletop or in 3 dimensions, how many marbles can be packed into a globe. Other considerations enter the choice of a code. For example, hexagon packing into the constraint of a rectangular box will leave empty space at the corners. As the dimensions get larger, the percentage of empty space grows smaller. But at certain dimensions, the packing uses all the space and these codes are the so called perfect codes. There are very few of these codes.
 
Another item which is often overlooked is the number of neighbors a single codeword may have. Again, let's use pennies as an example. First we pack the pennies in a rectangular grid. Each penny will have 4 near neighbors (and 4 at the corners which are farther away). In a hexagon, each penny will have 6 near neighbors. When we increase the dimensions, the number of near neighbors increases very rapidly.
 
The result is the number of ways for noise to make the receiver choose
a neighbor (hence an error) grows as well. This is a fundamental limitation
of block codes, and indeed all codes. It may be harder to cause an error to
a single neighbor, but the number of neighbors can be large enough so the
total error probability actually suffers.
 
==External links==