Achieving the Secrecy Capacity of Wiretap Channels Using Polar Codes
Hessam Mahdavifar, Alexander Vardy

TL;DR
This paper presents a method using polar codes to achieve the secrecy capacity of wiretap channels, ensuring secure and reliable communication for a wide class of symmetric, degraded channels.
Contribution
It introduces a polar coding scheme that attains secrecy capacity for symmetric, degraded wiretap channels, extending previous results beyond erasure channels and enabling strong security.
Findings
Achieves secrecy capacity for symmetric, degraded wiretap channels.
Provides a construction for strong security with polar codes.
Operates at rates approaching the secrecy capacity.
Abstract
Suppose Alice wishes to send messages to Bob through a communication channel C_1, but her transmissions also reach an eavesdropper Eve through another channel C_2. The goal is to design a coding scheme that makes it possible for Alice to communicate both reliably and securely. Reliability is measured in terms of Bob's probability of error in recovering the message, while security is measured in terms of Eve's equivocation ratio. Wyner showed that the situation is characterized by a single constant C_s, called the secrecy capacity, which has the following meaning: for all , there exist coding schemes of rate that asymptotically achieve both the reliability and the security objectives. However, his proof of this result is based upon a nonconstructive random-coding argument. To date, despite a considerable research effort, the only case where we know…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDNA and Biological Computing · Error Correcting Code Techniques · Wireless Communication Security Techniques
