Posted

Mark Walters (Jun 17 2026).
Abstract: Recently we showed that minimum weight decoding in the (6.6.6 planar) colour code is NP-hard. However, it remained an open question as to whether it was possible to approximate the minimum weight decoding arbitrarily closely in polynomial time. In this paper we prove that it is possible: for any ε>0\varepsilon>0 there is an polynomial time algorithm that, given a syndrome, can find an error-set generating that syndrome whose weight is at most 1+ε1+\varepsilon times the weight of the minimum weight decoding. As a consequence we see that, for any ε>0\varepsilon>0, there is a polynomial time algorithm that can correct all errors of weight up to (1−ε)d/2(1-\varepsilon)d/2 in the distance dd colour code (so almost up to the theoretical d/2d/2 limit). The polynomial we give is impractically large, but it does open the door for sensible polynomial time algorithms that approximate minimum weight decoding and, in particular, shows that approximate decoding is not NP-hard.

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