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[論文レビュー] Even Sets and Dual Projective Geometric Codes: A Tale of Cylinders

Sam Adriaensen|arXiv (Cornell University)|Jan 18, 2026
Finite Group Theory Research被引用数 0
ひとこと要約

The paper proves that the smallest even sets in PG(n,q) are cylinders with a hyperoval base, and shows that the minimum weight of the dual projective geometric code C1(n,q)⊥ reduces to the 2D case and is achieved by cylinder codewords.

ABSTRACT

In this paper, we prove that the smallest even sets in ${ m PG}(n,q)$, i.e. sets that intersect every line in an even number of points, are cylinders with a hyperoval as base. This fits into a more general study of dual projective geometric codes. Let $q$ be a prime power, and define $\mathcal C_k(n,q)^\perp$ as the kernel of the $k$-space vs. point incidence matrix of ${ m PG}(n,q)$, seen as a matrix over the prime order subfield of $\mathbb F_q$. Determining the minimum weight of this linear code is still an open problem in general, but has been reduced to the case $k=1$. There is a known construction that constructs small weight codewords of $\mathcal C_1(n,q)^\perp$ from minimum weight codewords of $\mathcal C_1(2,q)^\perp$. We call such codewords cylinder codewords. We pose the conjecture that all minimum weight codewords of $\mathcal C_1(n,q)^\perp$ are cylinder codewords. This conjecture is known to be true if $q$ is prime. We take three steps towards proving that the conjecture is true in general: (1) We prove that the conjecture is true if $q$ is even. This is equivalent to our classification of the smallest even sets. (2) We prove that the minimum weight of $\mathcal C_1(n,q)^\perp$ is $q^{n-2}$ times the minimum weight of $\mathcal C_1(2,q)^\perp$, which matches the weight of cylinder codewords. Thus, we completely reduce the problem of determining the minimum weight of $\mathcal C_1(n,q)^\perp$ to the case $n=2$. (3) We prove that if the conjecture is true for $n=3$, it is true in general.

研究の動機と目的

  • Characterize the smallest even sets in PG(n,q) and relate them to cylinder constructions with hyperoval bases.
  • Investigate the minimum weight of the dual code C1(n,q)⊥ and its relationship to cylinder codewords.
  • Establish reductions that connect the general n-dimensional problem to lower-dimensional cases (n=2 and n=3).
  • Prove that, in even q, the minimum weight codewords are exactly cylinder codewords with hyperoval bases.

提案手法

  • Define the k-space vs. point incidence matrix and the corresponding dual code Ck(n,q)⊥ over the subfield.
  • Employ cylinder constructions Cylρ(c) to lift 2D minimum-weight codewords to higher dimensions.
  • Use a variance-type argument on hyperplane distributions to bound incidences and derive weight bounds.
  • Prove reductions: d(C1(n,q)⊥) = q^(n-2) d(C1(2,q)⊥) and that cylinder codewords attain this weight.
  • Show that if the conjecture holds in 3D, it holds in all higher dimensions (n≥3).
  • Characterize smallest even sets (q even) as cylinders with hyperoval bases.]
  • research_questions:["What are the minimum-weight codewords of the dual projective geometric code C1(n,q)⊥?","Do cylinder codewords, constructed from minimum-weight codewords in PG(2,q), account for all minimum-weight codewords in higher dimensions?","Can the minimum weight in C1(n,q)⊥ be reduced to the 2D case (n=2) and further to the 3D case (n=3)?","What is the structure of the smallest even sets in PG(n,q) when q is even, and do they correspond to cylinders with a hyperoval base?","Is Conjecture 1.10 (all minimum-weight codewords are cylinder codewords) true in general, and can it be reduced to lower dimensions?"],
  • key_findings:[

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