Block Wiedemann algorithm

The block Wiedemann algorithm for computing kernel vectors of a matrix over a finite field is a generalization by Don Coppersmith of an algorithm due to Doug Wiedemann.

Wiedemann's algorithm

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Let   be an   square matrix over some finite field F, let   be a random vector of length  , and let  . Consider the sequence of vectors   obtained by repeatedly multiplying the vector by the matrix  ; let   be any other vector of length  , and consider the sequence of finite-field elements  

We know that the matrix   has a minimal polynomial; by the Cayley–Hamilton theorem we know that this polynomial is of degree (which we will call  ) no more than  . Say  . Then  ; so the minimal polynomial of the matrix annihilates the sequence   and hence  .

But the Berlekamp–Massey algorithm allows us to calculate relatively efficiently some sequence   with  . Our hope is that this sequence, which by construction annihilates  , actually annihilates  ; so we have  . We then take advantage of the initial definition of   to say   and so   is a hopefully non-zero kernel vector of  .

The block Wiedemann (or Coppersmith-Wiedemann) algorithm

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The natural implementation of sparse matrix arithmetic on a computer makes it easy to compute the sequence S in parallel for a number of vectors equal to the width of a machine word – indeed, it will normally take no longer to compute for that many vectors than for one. If you have several processors, you can compute the sequence S for a different set of random vectors in parallel on all the computers.

It turns out, by a generalization of the Berlekamp–Massey algorithm to provide a sequence of small matrices, that you can take the sequence produced for a large number of vectors and generate a kernel vector of the original large matrix. You need to compute   for some   where   need to satisfy   and   are a series of vectors of length n; but in practice you can take   as a sequence of unit vectors and simply write out the first   entries in your vectors at each time t.

Invariant Factor Calculation

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The block Wiedemann algorithm can be used to calculate the leading invariant factors of the matrix, ie, the largest blocks of the Frobenius normal form. Given   and   where   is a finite field of size  , the probability   that the leading   invariant factors of   are preserved in   is

 .[1]

References

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  1. ^ Harrison, Gavin; Johnson, Jeremy; Saunders, B. David (2022-01-01). "Probabilistic analysis of block Wiedemann for leading invariant factors". Journal of Symbolic Computation. 108: 98–116. arXiv:1803.03864. doi:10.1016/j.jsc.2021.06.005. ISSN 0747-7171.
  • Wiedemann, D., "Solving sparse linear equations over finite fields," IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory IT-32, pp. 54-62, 1986.
  • D. Coppersmith, Solving homogeneous linear equations over GF(2) via block Wiedemann algorithm, Math. Comp. 62 (1994), 333-350.