scholarly journals Factoring Polynomials Using Elliptic Curves

2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (4.10) ◽  
pp. 112
Author(s):  
A. Uma Maheswari ◽  
Prabha Durairaj

This paper presents a probabilistic algorithm to factor polynomials over finite fields using elliptic curves. The success of the algorithm depends on the initial choice of elliptic curve parameters. The algorithm is illustrated through numerical examples. 

Author(s):  
Anna ILYENKO ◽  
Sergii ILYENKO ◽  
Yana MASUR

In this article, the main problems underlying the current asymmetric crypto algorithms for the formation and verification of electronic-digital signature are considered: problems of factorization of large integers and problems of discrete logarithm. It is noted that for the second problem, it is possible to use algebraic groups of points other than finite fields. The group of points of the elliptical curve, which satisfies all set requirements, looked attractive on this side. Aspects of the application of elliptic curves in cryptography and the possibilities offered by these algebraic groups in terms of computational efficiency and crypto-stability of algorithms were also considered. Information systems using elliptic curves, the keys have a shorter length than the algorithms above the finite fields. Theoretical directions of improvement of procedure of formation and verification of electronic-digital signature with the possibility of ensuring the integrity and confidentiality of information were considered. The proposed method is based on the Schnorr signature algorithm, which allows data to be recovered directly from the signature itself, similarly to RSA-like signature systems, and the amount of recoverable information is variable depending on the information message. As a result, the length of the signature itself, which is equal to the sum of the length of the end field over which the elliptic curve is determined, and the artificial excess redundancy provided to the hidden message was achieved.


2012 ◽  
Vol 149 (2) ◽  
pp. 175-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chantal David ◽  
Ethan Smith

AbstractGiven an elliptic curve E and a positive integer N, we consider the problem of counting the number of primes p for which the reduction of E modulo p possesses exactly N points over 𝔽p. On average (over a family of elliptic curves), we show bounds that are significantly better than what is trivially obtained by the Hasse bound. Under some additional hypotheses, including a conjecture concerning the short-interval distribution of primes in arithmetic progressions, we obtain an asymptotic formula for the average.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (7&8) ◽  
pp. 631-644
Author(s):  
Brittanney Amento ◽  
Martin Rotteler ◽  
Rainer Steinwalds

Elliptic curves over finite fields ${\mathbb F}_{2^n}$ play a prominent role in modern cryptography. Published quantum algorithms dealing with such curves build on a short Weierstrass form in combination with affine or projective coordinates. In this paper we show that changing the curve representation allows a substantial reduction in the number of $T$-gates needed to implement the curve arithmetic. As a tool, we present a quantum circuit for computing multiplicative inverses in $\mathbb F_{2^n}$ in depth $\bigO(n\log_2 n)$ using a polynomial basis representation, which may be of independent interest.


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