
The breakthrough expands the practical construction horizon for Hadamard matrices, a cornerstone of coding theory and quantum information, delivering larger, more diverse designs for high‑performance communication systems.
Hadamard matrices have long been prized for their orthogonal properties, underpinning error‑correcting codes, spread‑spectrum communication, and quantum gate design. The classic Williamson construction links binary sequences to real‑valued Hadamard matrices, but extending this framework to quaternionic sequences—where entries draw from the four‑dimensional number system i, j, k—has remained computationally prohibitive. Prior exhaustive searches stalled at order 13, limiting theoretical insight and practical exploitation of larger quaternionic designs.
The new enumeration algorithm sidesteps the symmetry prerequisite that hampered earlier methods, allowing asymmetric quaternionic perfect sequences to be examined. Its core innovation lies in proving that when the matrix blocks are circulant, they must be pairwise amicable, a property that prunes the search tree by more than 25,000‑fold for order 20. This dramatic reduction enables a complete sweep of all circulant and potentially non‑symmetric Williamson‑type configurations up to order 21, yielding previously unseen quaternionic Hadamard matrices whose inequivalence to known families is rigorously demonstrated.
Beyond the mathematical triumph, the ability to generate larger quaternionic Hadamard matrices carries tangible benefits for industries reliant on high‑dimensional signal encoding. Quantum communication protocols can leverage the richer phase space of quaternionic constructions to enhance security and channel capacity, while advanced radar and wireless systems may exploit the matrices’ low‑correlation properties for superior interference mitigation. As researchers push the enumeration frontier beyond order 21, the field anticipates a cascade of novel designs that could reshape standards in coding theory, quantum error correction, and next‑generation data transmission.
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