What is a field?A field is a set of elements with two custom-defined arithmetic operations: most commonly, addition and multiplication. The elements of the field are an additive abelian group, and the non-zero elements of the field are a multiplicative abelian group. This means that all elements of the field have an additive inverse, and all non-zero elements have a multiplicative inverse. As is true for groups, other operations can be defined in a field, using its main two operations.
A field is called finite if it has a finite number of elements. The most commonly used finite fields in cryptography are the field Fp (where p is a prime number) and the field F2m.
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