AG codes have no list-decoding friends: Approaching the generalized Singleton bound requires exponential alphabets

Abstract

A simple, recently observed generalization of the classical Singleton bound to list-decoding asserts that rate R codes are not list-decodable using list-size L beyond an error fraction LL+1 (1-R) (the Singleton bound being the case of L=1, i.e., unique decoding). We prove that in order to approach this bound for any fixed L >1, one needs exponential alphabets. Specifically, for every L>1 and R∈(0,1), if a rate R code can be list-of-L decoded up to error fraction LL+1 (1-R -), then its alphabet must have size at least (L,R(1/)). This is in sharp contrast to the situation for unique decoding where certain families of rate R algebraic-geometry (AG) codes over an alphabet of size O(1/2) are unique-decodable up to error fraction (1-R-)/2. Our bounds hold even for subconstant 1/n, implying that any code exactly achieving the L-th generalized Singleton bound requires alphabet size 2L,R(n). Previously this was only known only for L=2 under the additional assumptions that the code is both linear and MDS. Our lower bound is tight up to constant factors in the exponent -- with high probability random codes (or, as shown recently, even random linear codes) over (OL(1/))-sized alphabets, can be list-of-L decoded up to error fraction LL+1 (1-R -).

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