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discrete logarithm
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(Definition)
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Let $p$ be a prime. We know that the group $G:=(\mathbb{Z}/p\mathbb{Z})^*$ is cyclic. Let $g$ be a primitive root of $G$ , i.e. $G=\{1,g,g^2,\dots,g^{p-2}\}$ . For a number $x\in G$ we want to know the unique number $0\leq n\leq p-2$ with $$x=g^n.$$ This number $n$ is called the discrete logarithm or index of $x$ to the basis $g$ and is denoted as $\operatorname{ind}_g(x)$ . For $x,y\in G$ it satisfies the following properties:
Furthermore, for a pair $g,h$ of distinct primitive roots, we also have, for any $x\in G$ :
It is a difficult problem to compute the discrete logarithm, while powering is very easy. Therefore this is of some interest to cryptography.
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"discrete logarithm" is owned by mathwizard. [ full author list (2) | owner history (2) ]
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Cross-references: cryptography, properties, basis, logarithm, number, primitive root, cyclic, group, prime
There are 33 references to this entry.
This is version 4 of discrete logarithm, born on 2004-12-21, modified 2008-03-08.
Object id is 6592, canonical name is DiscreteLogarithm.
Accessed 7013 times total.
Classification:
| AMS MSC: | 11A15 (Number theory :: Elementary number theory :: Power residues, reciprocity) |
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Pending Errata and Addenda
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