Sharp Bounds and New Constructions for Single-Error Detection and Correction in Analog Codes

Abstract

We study single-error detection and correction for analog codes over R. The key performance measures are the parameters Γ1(C) and Γ2(C), which quantify, respectively, the minimum separation required between large outlying errors that must be detected or located and the magnitude of tolerable perturbations. First, we prove that every real linear [n,k] code C satisfies \[ Γ1(C) 2nn-k. \] Moreover, when k=n-2, we prove that every real linear [n,n-2] code C satisfies \[ Γ2(C) 12(π/2n). \] Together, these two lower bounds settle all four open problems of Roth concerning the optimality of single-error-detecting and single-error-correcting analog codes. The proof of the first bound is based on a double-induction argument, while the proof of the second combines a zonotope-based geometric characterization of Γ2(C) with a cyclic sine-product inequality. In addition, we construct analog codes with higher fixed redundancy and show that, for every fixed r 2, there exists a class of linear [n, n-r] codes over R such that \[ Γ2(C) O(n1+1r-1). \] This gives a new upper bound in the fixed-redundancy regime, which was not covered by previously known constructions.

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