
doi: 10.1002/jcd.21377
AbstractA 3‐phase Barker array is a matrix of third roots of unity for which all out‐of‐phase aperiodic autocorrelations have magnitude 0 or 1. The only known truly two‐dimensional 3‐phase Barker arrays have size 2 × 2 or 3 × 3. We use a mixture of combinatorial arguments and algebraic number theory to establish severe restrictions on the size of a 3‐phase Barker array when at least one of its dimensions is divisible by 3. In particular, there exists a double‐exponentially growing arithmetic function T such that no 3‐phase Barker array of size with exists for all . For example, , , and . When both dimensions are divisible by 3, the existence problem is settled completely: if a 3‐phase Barker array of size exists, then .
ta113, algebraic number theory, Three-phase, Aperiodic autocorrelation, Algebraic number theory, aperiodic autocorrelation, Theory of error-correcting codes and error-detecting codes, three-phase array, Barker array, Combinatorial aspects of matrices (incidence, Hadamard, etc.)
ta113, algebraic number theory, Three-phase, Aperiodic autocorrelation, Algebraic number theory, aperiodic autocorrelation, Theory of error-correcting codes and error-detecting codes, three-phase array, Barker array, Combinatorial aspects of matrices (incidence, Hadamard, etc.)
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