Abstract

Subspace designs are a (large) collection of high-dimensional subspaces $\{H_i\}$ of $\F_q^m$ such that for any low-dimensional subspace $W$, only a small number of subspaces from the collection have non-trivial intersection with $W$; more precisely, the sum of dimensions of $W \cap H_i$ is at most some parameter $L$. The notion was put forth by Guruswami and Xing (STOC'13) with applications to list decoding variants of Reed-Solomon and algebraic-geometric codes, and later also used for explicit rank-metric codes with optimal list decoding radius. Guruswami and Kopparty (FOCS'13, Combinatorica'16) gave an explicit construction of subspace designs with near-optimal parameters. This construction was based on polynomials and has close connections to folded Reed-Solomon codes, and required large field size (specifically $q \ge m$). Forbes and Guruswami (RANDOM'15) used this construction to give explicit constant degree over large fields, and noted that subspace designs are a powerful tool in linear-algebraic pseudorandomness. Here, we construct subspace designs over any field, at the expense of a modest worsening of the bound $L$ on total intersection dimension. Our approach is based on a (non-trivial) extension of the polynomial-based construction to algebraic function fields, and instantiating the approach with cyclotomic function fields. Plugging in our new subspace designs in the construction of Forbes and Guruswami yields dimension expanders over $\F^n$ for any field $\F$, with logarithmic degree and expansion guarantee for subspaces of dimension $\Omega(n/(\log \log n))$.

Highlights

  • An emerging theory of “linear-algebraic pseudorandomness” studies the linear-algebraic analogs of fundamental Boolean pseudorandom objects where the rank of subspaces plays the role of the size of subsets

  • A recent work [4] studied the interrelationships between several such algebraic objects such as subspace designs, dimension expanders, rank condensers, and rank-metric codes, and highlighted the fundamental unifying role played by subspace designs in this web of connections

  • A subspace design is a collection of subspaces of a vector space Fm q such that any low-dimensional subspace W intersects only a small number of subspaces from the collection

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Summary

Introduction

An emerging theory of “linear-algebraic pseudorandomness” studies the linear-algebraic analogs of fundamental Boolean pseudorandom objects where the rank of subspaces plays the role of the size of subsets. By using a method akin to the conversion of Reed-Solomon codes over extension fields to BCH codes over the base field, applied to the large field subspace designs of Theorem 2, Forbes and Guruswami [4] constructed (Ω(n/ log n), Ω(1))-dimension expanders of O(log n) degree. We hope that the ideas in this work pave the way for a subspace design similar to Theorem 2 over small fields, and the consequent construction of constant-degree (Ω(n), Ω(1))-dimension expanders over all fields. The natural approach would be to replace the space of low-degree polynomials by a Riemann-Roch space consisting of functions of bounded pole order at some place We prove that such a construction can work, provided the degree is less than the degree of the field extension (and some other mild condition is met).

Preliminaries on function fields
Construction of subspace design
Subspace design from cyclotomic function fields
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