Multivariate Public Key Cryptosystems
Author: Jintai Ding
Multivariate Public Key Cryptosystems systematically presents the subject matter for a broad audience. Information security experts in industry can use the book as a guide for understanding what is needed to implement these cryptosystems for practical applications, and researchers in both computer science and mathematics will find it a good starting point for exploring this new field. It is also suitable as a textbook for advanced-level students. Written more from a computational perspective, the authors provide the necessary mathematical theory behind MPKC; students with some previous exposure to abstract algebra will be well-prepared to read and understand the material.
Table of Contents:
1 | Overview | 1 |
2 | Matsumoto-Imai cryptosystems | 11 |
3 | Oil-vinegar signature schemes | 63 |
4 | Hidden field equations | 99 |
5 | Internal perturbation | 113 |
6 | Triangular schemes | 137 |
7 | Direct attacks | 191 |
8 | Future research | 233 |
Go to: Onions and Other Vegetable Alliums or Piece of Cake
Introduction to Computational Physics
Author: Tao Pang
Thoroughly updated and revised for its second edition, this advanced textbook provides an introduction to the basic methods of computational physics, and an overview of recent progress in several areas of scientific computing. Tao Pang presents many step-by-step examples, including program listings in JavaTM, of practical numerical methods from modern physics and related areas. Now including many more exercises, the volume can be used as a textbook for either undergraduate or first-year graduate courses on computational physics or scientific computation. It will also be a useful reference for anyone involved in computational research.
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