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Nearly orthogonal vectors and small antipodal spherical codes (1803.02949v3)

Published 8 Mar 2018 in math.CO, cs.IT, math.IT, and math.MG

Abstract: How can $d+k$ vectors in $\mathbb{R}d$ be arranged so that they are as close to orthogonal as possible? In particular, define $\theta(d,k):=\min_X\max_{x\neq y\in X}|\langle x,y\rangle|$ where the minimum is taken over all collections of $d+k$ unit vectors $X\subseteq\mathbb{R}d$. In this paper, we focus on the case where $k$ is fixed and $d\to\infty$. In establishing bounds on $\theta(d,k)$, we find an intimate connection to the existence of systems of ${k+1\choose 2}$ equiangular lines in $\mathbb{R}k$. Using this connection, we are able to pin down $\theta(d,k)$ whenever $k\in{1,2,3,7,23}$ and establish asymptotics for general $k$. The main tool is an upper bound on $\mathbb{E}_{x,y\sim\mu}|\langle x,y\rangle|$ whenever $\mu$ is an isotropic probability mass on $\mathbb{R}k$, which may be of independent interest. Our results translate naturally to the analogous question in $\mathbb{C}d$. In this case, the question relates to the existence of systems of $k2$ equiangular lines in $\mathbb{C}k$, also known as SIC-POVM in physics literature.

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