Ternary public-key cryptosystem

Abstract

Public-key cryptosystems eliminate the requirement for pre-shared secret keys by enabling encryption with a publicly disclosed key and decryption with a corresponding private key. In this article we generalize the public-key cryptosystems to ternary algebraic structures, with particular attention to ElGamal as a representative family. We introduce the necessary algebraic background for nonderived ternary structures, including special elements, ternary group rings, and a matrix ternarization procedure that maps binary rings and group rings to antidiagonal symbolic matrices closed under ternary multiplication. Building on these foundations, we formulate a ternary analogue of the ElGamal three-step protocol (key generation, ephemeral encryption, and decryption via querelements) and derive explicit ternary power and querelement formulas that enable correct decryption. Concrete instantiations and numerical examples over a ternary fraction field, a matrix-ternarized finite group ring, and a finite \((6,3)\)-ring (field) validate the construction and illustrate admissible word-length quantization and cycle behaviour of ternary powers. The ternary framework highlights two practical advantages: richer algebraic structure (querelements replace binary inverses) that increases algebraic complexity for attackers, and higher information density (matrix ternarization transfers paired/plaintext vectors). Formal hardness assumptions, optimized parameter choices, and comprehensive security and performance analyses remain necessary future work.

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