Data for Sequences with identical autocorrelation functions

The paper can be found at:

Daniel J. Katz, Adeebur Rahman, and Michael J Ward, Sequences with identical autocorrelation functions, IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, 71(4): 3194-3202 (2025).

A preprint version is available at: arXiv: 2308.07467 [cs.IT]

The work on this paper and on the accompanying materials here was supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grants 1815487 and 2206454. This research was done using services provided by the Open Science Grid Consortium, which is supported by the National Science Foundation awards 2030508 and 1836650. Adeebur Rahman was supported by the Ramanujan Research Scholarship from the Department of Mathematics, California State University, Northridge. Michael J Ward was supported by the Efrem Ostrow Scholarship from the Department of Mathematics, California State University, Northridge.

Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

The copyright for all material posted on this web page is held by Daniel J. Katz, Adeebur Rahman, and Michael J Ward (2025). All rights reserved. If you are interested in using this for your research, please contact me at email: [my first name] [dot] [my last name] [at] csun [dot] edu

The data files used to make Table I in the paper (along with the discussion on pages 3196-3197) are named according to their sequence length. For each length L, there is a humanly readable file (iso_f_L_M.txt) and a binary data file (iso_f_L_M.dat), where the M is the number of separate calculation runs that were used to produce that data set. An description of the contents of these two data files is in readme.txt under the heading "THE DATA FILES". The files can be found here.

The program used to make these data files is also discussed in readme.txt under the heading "THE PROGRAM", and various versions are discussed under the heading "THE VERSIONS OF THE PROGRAM". The various versions can be found in subdirectories here, along with the container that was used to run Versions B and C on the Open Science Grid.