Irreducible polynomial
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In mathematics, an irreducible polynomial is, roughly speaking, a non-constant polynomial that cannot be factored into the product of two non-constant polynomials. The property of irreducibility depends on the field or ring to which the coefficients are considered to belong. For example, the polynomial x2 − 2 is irreducible if the coefficients 1 and −2 are considered as integers, but it factors as if the coefficients are considered as real numbers. One says that "the polynomial x2 - 2 is irreducible over the integers but not over the reals".
A polynomial that is not irreducible is sometimes said to be reducible.[1][2] However this term must be used with care, as it may refer to other notions of reduction.
Irreducible polynomials appear naturally in the study of polynomial factorization and algebraic field extensions.
It is helpful to compare irreducible polynomials to prime numbers: prime numbers (together with the corresponding negative numbers of equal magnitude) are the irreducible integers. They exhibit many of the general properties of the concept of 'irreducibility' that equally apply to irreducible polynomials, such as the essentially unique factorization into prime or irreducible factors.
Definition
If F is a field, a non-constant polynomial is irreducible over F if its coefficients belong to F and it cannot be factored into the product of two non-constant polynomials with coefficients in F.
A polynomial with integer coefficients, or, more generally, with coefficients in a unique factorization domain R, is sometimes said to be irreducible (or irreducible over R) if it is an irreducible element of the polynomial ring, that is, it is not invertible, not zero, and cannot be factored into the product of two non-invertible polynomials with coefficients in R. Another definition is frequently used, saying that a polynomial is irreducible over R if it is irreducible over the field of fractions of R (the field of rational numbers, if R is the integers). Both definitions generalize the definition given for the case of coefficients in a field, because, in this case, the non-constant polynomials are exactly the polynomials that are non-invertible and non-zero.
Simple examples
The following six polynomials demonstrate some elementary properties of reducible and irreducible polynomials:
- ,
- ,
- ,
- ,
- ,
- .
Over the integers, the first three polynomials are reducible (the third one is reducible because the factor 3 is not invertible in the integers), the last two are irreducible. (The fourth, of course, is not a polynomial over the integers.)
Over the rational numbers, the first two and the fourth polynomials are reducible, but the other three polynomials are irreducible (as a polynomial over the rationals, 3 is a unit, and, therefore, does not count as a factor).
Over the real numbers, the first five polynomials are reducible, but is irreducible.
Over the complex numbers, all six polynomials are reducible.
Over the complex numbers
Over the complex field, and, more generally, over an algebraically closed field, a univariate polynomial is irreducible if and only if its degree is one. This fact is known as the fundamental theorem of algebra in the case of the complex numbers and, in general, as the condition of being algebraically closed.
It follows that every nonconstant univariate polynomial can be factored as
where is the degree, the leading coefficient and the zeros of the polynomial (not necessarily distinct).
There are irreducible multivariate polynomials of every degree over the complex numbers. For example, the polynomial
which defines a Fermat curve, is irreducible for every positive n.
Over the reals
Over the field of reals, the degree of an irreducible univariate polynomial is either one or two. More precisely, the irreducible polynomials are the polynomials of degree one and the quadratic polynomials that have a negative discriminant It follows that every non-constant univariate polynomial can be factored as a product of polynomials of degree at most two. For example, factors over the real numbers as and it cannot be factored further, as both factors have a negative discriminant:
Unique factorization property
Every polynomial over a field F may be factored in a product of a non-zero constant and a finite number of irreducible (over F) polynomials. This decomposition is unique up to the order of the factors and the multiplication of the factors by non-zero constants whose product is 1.
Over a unique factorization domain the same theorem is true, but is more accurately formulated by using the notion of primitive polynomial. A primitive polynomial is a polynomial over a unique factorization domain, such that 1 is a greatest common divisor of its coefficients.
Let F be a unique factorization domain. A non-constant irreducible polynomial over F is primitive. A primitive polynomial over F is irreducible over F if and only if it is irreducible over the field of fractions of F. Every polynomial over F may be decomposed into the product of a non zero constant and a finite number of non-constant irreducible primitive polynomials. The non-zero constant may itself be decomposed into the product of a unit of F and a finite number of irreducible elements of F. Both factorizations are unique up to the order of the factors and the multiplication of the factors by a unit of F
This is this theorem which motivates that the definition of irreducible polynomial over a unique factorization domain often supposes that the polynomial is non-constant.
All algorithms which are presently implemented for factoring polynomials over the integers and over the rational numbers use this result (see Factorization of polynomials).
Over the integers
The irreducibility of a polynomial over the integers is related to that over the field of elements (for a prime ). In particular, if a univariate polynomial f over is irreducible over for some prime that does not divide the leading coefficient of f (the coefficient of the higher power of the variable), then f is irreducible over . Eisenstein's criterion is a variant of this property where irreducibility over is also involved.
The converse, however, is not true: there are polynomials of arbitrary large degree that are irreducible over the integers and reducible over every finite field.[3] A simple example of such a polynomial is
The relationship between irreducibility over the integers and irreducibility modulo p is deeper than the previous result: to date, all implemented algorithms for factorization and irreducibility over the integers and over the rational numbers use the factorization over finite fields as a subroutine.
Algorithms
The unique factorization property of polynomials does not mean that the factorization of a given polynomial may always be computed. Even the irreducibility of a polynomial may not always be proved by a computation: there are fields over which no algorithm can exist for deciding the irreducibility of arbitrary polynomials.[4]
Algorithms for factoring polynomials and deciding irreducibility are known and implemented in computer algebra systems for polynomials over the integers, the rational numbers, finite fields and finitely generated field extension of these fields. All these algorithms use the algorithms for factorization of polynomials over finite fields.
Field extension
The notions of irreducible polynomial and of algebraic field extension are strongly related, in the following way.
Let x be an element of an extension L of a field K. This element is said to be algebraic if it is a root of a polynomial with coefficients in K. Among the polynomials of which x is a root, there is exactly one which is monic and of minimal degree, called the minimal polynomial of x. The minimal polynomial of an algebraic element x of L is irreducible, and is the unique monic irreducible polynomial of which x is a root. The minimal polynomial of x divides every polynomial which has x as a root (this is Abel's irreducibility theorem).
Conversely, if is a univariate polynomial over a field K, let be the quotient ring of the polynomial ring by the ideal generated by P. Then L is a field if and only if P is irreducible over K. In this case, if x is the image of X in L, the minimal polynomial of x is the quotient of P by its leading coefficient.
An example of the above is the standard definition of the complex numbers as
If a polynomial P has an irreducible factor Q over K, which has a degree greater than one, one may apply to Q the preceding construction of an algebraic extension, for getting an extension in which P has at least one more root than in K. Iterating this construction, one gets eventually a field over which P factors into linear factors. This field, unique up to a field isomorphism, is called the splitting field of P.
Over an integral domain
If R is an integral domain, an element f of R which is neither zero nor a unit is called irreducible if there are no non-units g and h with f = gh. One can show that every prime element is irreducible;[5] the converse is not true in general but holds in unique factorization domains. The polynomial ring F[x] over a field F (or any unique-factorization domain) is again a unique factorization domain. Inductively, this means that the polynomial ring in n indeterminants (over a ring R) is a unique factorization domain if the same is true for R.
See also
- Gauss's lemma (polynomial)
- Rational root theorem, a method of finding whether a polynomial has a linear factor with rational coefficients
- Eisenstein's criterion
- Perron method
- Hilbert's irreducibility theorem
- Cohn's irreducibility criterion
- Irreducible component of a topological space
- Factorization of polynomials over finite fields
- Quartic function#Solving by factoring into quadratics
- Cubic function#Factorization
- Casus irreducibilis, the irreducible cubic with three real roots
- Quadratic equation#Quadratic factorization
Notes
- ^ Gallian 2012, p. 311
- ^ Mac Lane and Birkhoff (1999) do not explicitly define "reducible", but they use it in several places. For example: "For the present, we note only that any reducible quadratic or cubic polynomial must have a linear factor." (p. 268)
- ^ David Dummit; Richard Foote (2004). "chapter 9, Proposition 12". Abtract Algebra. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 309. ISBN 0-471-43334-9.
- ^ Fröhlich, A.; Shepherson, J. C. (1955), "On the factorisation of polynomials in a finite number of steps", Mathematische Zeitschrift, 62 (1), doi:10.1007/BF01180640, ISSN 0025-5874
- ^ Consider p a prime that is reducible: p=ab. Then p | ab => p | a or p | b. Say p | a => a = pc, then we have: p=ab=pcb => p(1-cb)=0. Because R is a domain we have: cb=1. So b is a unit and p is irreducible
References
- Lang, Serge (2002), Algebra, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 211 (Revised third ed.), New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-0-387-95385-4, MR 1878556. This classical book covers most of the content of this article.
- Gallian, Joseph (2012), Contemporary Abstract Algebra (8th ed.), Cengage Learning
- Lidl, Rudolf; Niederreiter, Harald (1997), Finite fields (2nd ed.), Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-39231-0, pp. 91.
- Mac Lane, Saunders; Birkhoff, Garrett (1999), Algebra (3rd ed.), American Mathematical Society
- Menezes, Alfred J.; Van Oorschot, Paul C.; Vanstone, Scott A. (1997), Handbook of applied cryptography, CRC Press, ISBN 978-0-8493-8523-0, pp. 154.
External links
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Irreducible Polynomial". MathWorld.
- Irreducible Polynomial at PlanetMath.
- Information on Primitive and Irreducible Polynomials, The (Combinatorial) Object Server.