Index tables of finite fields and modular golomb rulers

  • Authors:
  • Ana Sălăgean;David Gardner;Raphael Phan

  • Affiliations:
  • Loughborough University, UK;Loughborough University, UK;Loughborough University, UK

  • Venue:
  • SETA'12 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Sequences and Their Applications
  • Year:
  • 2012

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Abstract

For a Galois field GF(2n) defined by a primitive element α with minimal polynomial f, the index table contains in row i the coordinates of αi in the polynomial basis αn−1, αn−2,…, α, 1. Each column i in this table equals the m-sequence with characteristic polynomial f, shifted cyclically by some offset hi. In this paper we show that the set of the n shifts hi contains large subsets which are modular Golomb rulers modulo 2n−1 (i.e. all the differences are different). Let D be the set of integers j such that the coefficient of xj in f is non-zero. We prove that the set HD of shifts corresponding to columns j∈D can be partitioned into two subsets (the columns in the left half of the table and the ones in the right half) each of which is a modular Golomb ruler. Based on this result and on computational data, we conjecture that in fact the whole set HD is a modular Golomb ruler. We give a polynomial time algorithm for deciding if given a subset of column positions, the corresponding shifts are a modular Golomb ruler. These results are applied to filter generators used in the design of stream ciphers. Golić recommends that in order to withstand his inversion attack, one of the design requirements should be that the inputs of the non-linear filtering function are taken from positions of a Fibonacci LFSR which form a Golomb ruler. We propose using a Galois LFSR instead and selecting positions such that the corresponding shifts form a modular Golomb ruler. This would allow for a larger number of inputs to be selected (roughly n/2 rather than $\sqrt{2n}$) while still satisfying Golić's requirement.