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Eisenstein's criterion

In mathematics, Eisenstein's criterion gives a sufficient condition for a polynomial with integer coefficients to be irreducible over the rational numbers – that is, for it to not be factorizable into the product of non-constant polynomials with rational coefficients.

This criterion is not applicable to all polynomials with integer coefficients that are irreducible over the rational numbers, but it does allow in certain important cases for irreducibility to be proved with very little effort. It may apply either directly or after transformation of the original polynomial.

This criterion is named after Gotthold Eisenstein. In the early 20th century, it was also known as the Schönemann–Eisenstein theorem because Theodor Schönemann was the first to publish it.[1][2]

Criterion edit

Suppose we have the following polynomial with integer coefficients:

 

If there exists a prime number p such that the following three conditions all apply:

  • p divides each ai for 0 ≤ i < n,
  • p does not divide an, and
  • p2 does not divide a0,

then Q is irreducible over the rational numbers. It will also be irreducible over the integers, unless all its coefficients have a nontrivial factor in common (in which case Q as integer polynomial will have some prime number, necessarily distinct from p, as an irreducible factor). The latter possibility can be avoided by first making Q primitive, by dividing it by the greatest common divisor of its coefficients (the content of Q). This division does not change whether Q is reducible or not over the rational numbers (see Primitive part–content factorization for details), and will not invalidate the hypotheses of the criterion for p (on the contrary it could make the criterion hold for some prime, even if it did not before the division).

Examples edit

Eisenstein's criterion may apply either directly (i.e., using the original polynomial) or after transformation of the original polynomial.

Direct (without transformation) edit

Consider the polynomial Q(x) = 3x4 + 15x2 + 10. In order for Eisenstein's criterion to apply for a prime number p it must divide both non-leading coefficients 15 and 10, which means only p = 5 could work, and indeed it does since 5 does not divide the leading coefficient 3, and its square 25 does not divide the constant coefficient 10. One may therefore conclude that Q is irreducible over Q (and, since it is primitive, over Z as well). Note that since Q is of degree 4, this conclusion could not have been established by only checking that Q has no rational roots (which eliminates possible factors of degree 1), since a decomposition into two quadratic factors could also be possible.

Indirect (after transformation) edit

Often Eisenstein's criterion does not apply for any prime number. It may however be that it applies (for some prime number) to the polynomial obtained after substitution (for some integer a) of x + a for x. The fact that the polynomial after substitution is irreducible then allows concluding that the original polynomial is as well. This procedure is known as applying a shift.

For example consider H = x2 + x + 2, in which the coefficient 1 of x is not divisible by any prime, Eisenstein's criterion does not apply to H. But if one substitutes x for x + 3 in H, one obtains the polynomial x2 + 7x + 14, which satisfies Eisenstein's criterion for the prime number 7. Since the substitution is an automorphism of the ring Q[x], the fact that we obtain an irreducible polynomial after substitution implies that we had an irreducible polynomial originally. In this particular example it would have been simpler to argue that H (being monic of degree 2) could only be reducible if it had an integer root, which it obviously does not; however the general principle of trying substitutions in order to make Eisenstein's criterion apply is a useful way to broaden its scope.

Another possibility to transform a polynomial so as to satisfy the criterion, which may be combined with applying a shift, is reversing the order of its coefficients, provided its constant term is nonzero (without which it would be divisible by x anyway). This is so because such polynomials are reducible in R[x] if and only if they are reducible in R[x, x−1] (for any integral domain R), and in that ring the substitution of x−1 for x reverses the order of the coefficients (in a manner symmetric about the constant coefficient, but a following shift in the exponent amounts to multiplication by a unit). As an example 2x5 − 4x2 − 3 satisfies the criterion for p = 2 after reversing its coefficients, and (being primitive) is therefore irreducible in Z[x].

Cyclotomic polynomials edit

An important class of polynomials whose irreducibility can be established using Eisenstein's criterion is that of the cyclotomic polynomials for prime numbers p. Such a polynomial is obtained by dividing the polynomial xp − 1 by the linear factor x − 1, corresponding to its obvious root 1 (which is its only rational root if p > 2):

 

Here, as in the earlier example of H, the coefficients 1 prevent Eisenstein's criterion from applying directly. However the polynomial will satisfy the criterion for p after substitution of x + 1 for x: this gives

 

all of whose non-leading coefficients are divisible by p by properties of binomial coefficients, and whose constant coefficient is equal to p, and therefore not divisible by p2. An alternative way to arrive at this conclusion is to use the identity (a + b)p = ap + bp which is valid in characteristic p (and which is based on the same properties of binomial coefficients, and gives rise to the Frobenius endomorphism), to compute the reduction modulo p of the quotient of polynomials:

 

which means that the non-leading coefficients of the quotient are all divisible by p; the remaining verification that the constant term of the quotient is p can be done by substituting 1 (instead of x + 1) for x into the expanded form xp−1 + ... + x + 1.

History edit

Theodor Schönemann was the first to publish a version of the criterion,[1] in 1846 in Crelle's Journal,[3] which reads in translation

That (xa)n + pF(x) will be irreducible to the modulus p2 when F(x) to the modulus p does not contain a factor xa.

This formulation already incorporates a shift to a in place of 0; the condition on F(x) means that F(a) is not divisible by p, and so pF(a) is divisible by p but not by p2. As stated it is not entirely correct in that it makes no assumptions on the degree of the polynomial F(x), so that the polynomial considered need not be of the degree n that its expression suggests; the example x2 + p(x3 + 1) ≡ (x2 + p)(px + 1) mod p2, shows the conclusion is not valid without such hypothesis. Assuming that the degree of F(x) does not exceed n, the criterion is correct however, and somewhat stronger than the formulation given above, since if (xa)n + pF(x) is irreducible modulo p2, it certainly cannot decompose in Z[x] into non-constant factors.

Subsequently Eisenstein published a somewhat different version in 1850, also in Crelle's Journal.[4] This version reads in translation

When in a polynomial F(x) in x of arbitrary degree the coefficient of the highest term is 1, and all following coefficients are whole (real, complex) numbers, into which a certain (real resp. complex) prime number m divides, and when furthermore the last coefficient is equal to εm, where ε denotes a number not divisible by m: then it is impossible to bring F(x) into the form

 

where μ, ν ≥ 1, μ + ν = deg(F(x)), and all a and b are whole (real resp. complex) numbers; the equation F(x) = 0 is therefore irreducible.

Here "whole real numbers" are ordinary integers and "whole complex numbers" are Gaussian integers; one should similarly interpret "real and complex prime numbers". The application for which Eisenstein developed his criterion was establishing the irreducibility of certain polynomials with coefficients in the Gaussian integers that arise in the study of the division of the lemniscate into pieces of equal arc-length.

Remarkably Schönemann and Eisenstein, once having formulated their respective criteria for irreducibility, both immediately apply it to give an elementary proof of the irreducibility of the cyclotomic polynomials for prime numbers, a result that Gauss had obtained in his Disquisitiones Arithmeticae with a much more complicated proof. In fact, Eisenstein adds in a footnote that the only proof for this irreducibility known to him, other than that of Gauss, is one given by Kronecker in 1845. This shows that he was unaware of the two different proofs of this statement that Schönemann had given in his 1846 article, where the second proof was based on the above-mentioned criterion. This is all the more surprising given the fact that two pages further, Eisenstein actually refers (for a different matter) to the first part of Schönemann's article. In a note ("Notiz") that appeared in the following issue of the Journal,[5] Schönemann points this out to Eisenstein, and indicates that the latter's method is not essentially different from the one he used in the second proof.

Basic proof edit

To prove the validity of the criterion, suppose Q satisfies the criterion for the prime number p, but that it is nevertheless reducible in Q[x], from which we wish to obtain a contradiction. From Gauss' lemma it follows that Q is reducible in Z[x] as well, and in fact can be written as the product Q = GH of two non-constant polynomials G, H (in case Q is not primitive, one applies the lemma to the primitive polynomial Q/c (where the integer c is the content of Q) to obtain a decomposition for it, and multiplies c into one of the factors to obtain a decomposition for Q). Now reduce Q = GH modulo p to obtain a decomposition in (Z/pZ)[x]. But by hypothesis this reduction for Q leaves its leading term, of the form axn for a non-zero constant aZ/pZ, as the only nonzero term. But then necessarily the reductions modulo p of G and H also make all non-leading terms vanish (and cannot make their leading terms vanish), since no other decompositions of axn are possible in (Z/pZ)[x], which is a unique factorization domain. In particular the constant terms of G and H vanish in the reduction, so they are divisible by p, but then the constant term of Q, which is their product, is divisible by p2, contrary to the hypothesis, and one has a contradiction.

A second proof of Eisenstein's criterion also starts with the assumption that the polynomial Q(x) is reducible. It is shown that this assumption entails a contradiction.

The assumption that

 

is reducible means that there are polynomials

 

Such that

 

The coefficient a0 of the polynomial Q(x) can be divided by the prime p but not by p2. Since a0 = c0d0, it is possible to divide c0 or d0 by p, but not both. One may without loss of generality proceed

  • with a coefficient c0 that can be divided by p and
  • with a coefficient d0 that cannot be divided by p.

By the assumption,   does not divide  . Because an = cr ds, neither cr nor ds can be divided by p. Thus, if   is the  -th coefficient of the reducible polynomial  , then (possibly with   in case  )

 

wherein   cannot be divided by  , because neither   nor   can be divided by  .

We will prove that   are all divisible by p. As   is also divisible by p (by hypothesis of the criterion), this implies that

 

is divisible by p, a contradiction proving the criterion.

It is possible to divide   by  , because   can be divided by  .

By initial assumption, it is possible to divide the coefficient a1 of the polynomial Q(x) by p. Since

 

and since d0 is not a multiple of p it must be possible to divide c1 by p. Analogously, by induction,   is a multiple of   for all  , which finishes the proof.

Advanced explanation edit

Applying the theory of the Newton polygon for the p-adic number field, for an Eisenstein polynomial, we are supposed to take the lower convex envelope of the points

(0, 1), (1, v1), (2, v2), ..., (n − 1, vn−1), (n, 0),

where vi is the p-adic valuation of ai (i.e. the highest power of p dividing it). Now the data we are given on the vi for 0 < i < n, namely that they are at least one, is just what we need to conclude that the lower convex envelope is exactly the single line segment from (0, 1) to (n, 0), the slope being −1/n.

This tells us that each root of Q has p-adic valuation 1/n and hence that Q is irreducible over the p-adic field (since, for instance, no product of any proper subset of the roots has integer valuation); and a fortiori over the rational number field.

This argument is much more complicated than the direct argument by reduction mod p. It does however allow one to see, in terms of algebraic number theory, how frequently Eisenstein's criterion might apply, after some change of variable; and so limit severely the possible choices of p with respect to which the polynomial could have an Eisenstein translate (that is, become Eisenstein after an additive change of variables as in the case of the p-th cyclotomic polynomial).

In fact only primes p ramifying in the extension of Q generated by a root of Q have any chance of working. These can be found in terms of the discriminant of Q. For example, in the case x2 + x + 2 given above, the discriminant is −7 so that 7 is the only prime that has a chance of making it satisfy the criterion. Modulo 7, it becomes (x − 3)2— a repeated root is inevitable, since the discriminant is 0 mod 7. Therefore the variable shift is actually something predictable.

Again, for the cyclotomic polynomial, it becomes

(x − 1)p−1 mod p;

the discriminant can be shown to be (up to sign) pp−2, by linear algebra methods.

More precisely, only totally ramified primes have a chance of being Eisenstein primes for the polynomial. (In quadratic fields, ramification is always total, so the distinction is not seen in the quadratic case like x2 + x + 2 above.) In fact, Eisenstein polynomials are directly linked to totally ramified primes, as follows: if a field extension of the rationals is generated by the root of a polynomial that is Eisenstein at p then p is totally ramified in the extension, and conversely if p is totally ramified in a number field then the field is generated by the root of an Eisenstein polynomial at p.[6]

Generalization edit

Generalized criterion edit

Given an integral domain D, let

 

be an element of D[x], the polynomial ring with coefficients in D.

Suppose there exists a prime ideal p of D such that

  • aip for each in,
  • anp, and
  • a0p2, where p2 is the ideal product of p with itself.

Then Q cannot be written as a product of two non-constant polynomials in D[x]. If in addition Q is primitive (i.e., it has no non-trivial constant divisors), then it is irreducible in D[x]. If D is a unique factorization domain with field of fractions F, then by Gauss's lemma Q is irreducible in F[x], whether or not it is primitive (since constant factors are invertible in F[x]); in this case a possible choice of prime ideal is the principal ideal generated by any irreducible element of D. The latter statement gives original theorem for D = Z or (in Eisenstein's formulation) for D = Z[i].

Proof edit

The proof of this generalization is similar to the one for the original statement, considering the reduction of the coefficients modulo p; the essential point is that a single-term polynomial over the integral domain D/p cannot decompose as a product in which at least one of the factors has more than one term (because in such a product there can be no cancellation in the coefficient either of the highest or the lowest possible degree).

Example edit

After Z, one of the basic examples of an integral domain is the polynomial ring D = k[u] in the variable u over the field k. In this case, the principal ideal generated by u is a prime ideal. Eisenstein's criterion can then be used to prove the irreducibility of a polynomial such as Q(x) = x3 + ux + u in D[x]. Indeed, u does not divide a3, u2 does not divide a0, and u divides a0, a1 and a2. This shows that this polynomial satisfies the hypotheses of the generalization of Eisenstein's criterion for the prime ideal p = (u) since, for a principal ideal (u), being an element of (u) is equivalent to being divisible by u.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Cox 2011.
  2. ^ Dorwart 1935.
  3. ^ Schönemann (1846), p. 100.
  4. ^ Eisenstein (1850), p. 166.
  5. ^ Schönemann (1850), p. 188.
  6. ^ Frohlich (1967), "Local fields", in Cassels and Frohlich (ed.), Algebraic number theory, pp. 22–23.

References edit

eisenstein, criterion, mathematics, gives, sufficient, condition, polynomial, with, integer, coefficients, irreducible, over, rational, numbers, that, factorizable, into, product, constant, polynomials, with, rational, coefficients, this, criterion, applicable. In mathematics Eisenstein s criterion gives a sufficient condition for a polynomial with integer coefficients to be irreducible over the rational numbers that is for it to not be factorizable into the product of non constant polynomials with rational coefficients This criterion is not applicable to all polynomials with integer coefficients that are irreducible over the rational numbers but it does allow in certain important cases for irreducibility to be proved with very little effort It may apply either directly or after transformation of the original polynomial This criterion is named after Gotthold Eisenstein In the early 20th century it was also known as the Schonemann Eisenstein theorem because Theodor Schonemann was the first to publish it 1 2 Contents 1 Criterion 2 Examples 2 1 Direct without transformation 2 2 Indirect after transformation 2 3 Cyclotomic polynomials 3 History 4 Basic proof 5 Advanced explanation 6 Generalization 6 1 Generalized criterion 6 2 Proof 6 3 Example 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesCriterion editSuppose we have the following polynomial with integer coefficients Q x a n x n a n 1 x n 1 a 1 x a 0 displaystyle Q x a n x n a n 1 x n 1 cdots a 1 x a 0 nbsp If there exists a prime number p such that the following three conditions all apply p divides each ai for 0 i lt n p does not divide an and p2 does not divide a0 then Q is irreducible over the rational numbers It will also be irreducible over the integers unless all its coefficients have a nontrivial factor in common in which case Q as integer polynomial will have some prime number necessarily distinct from p as an irreducible factor The latter possibility can be avoided by first making Q primitive by dividing it by the greatest common divisor of its coefficients the content of Q This division does not change whether Q is reducible or not over the rational numbers see Primitive part content factorization for details and will not invalidate the hypotheses of the criterion for p on the contrary it could make the criterion hold for some prime even if it did not before the division Examples editEisenstein s criterion may apply either directly i e using the original polynomial or after transformation of the original polynomial Direct without transformation edit Consider the polynomial Q x 3x4 15x2 10 In order for Eisenstein s criterion to apply for a prime number p it must divide both non leading coefficients 15 and 10 which means only p 5 could work and indeed it does since 5 does not divide the leading coefficient 3 and its square 25 does not divide the constant coefficient 10 One may therefore conclude that Q is irreducible over Q and since it is primitive over Z as well Note that since Q is of degree 4 this conclusion could not have been established by only checking that Q has no rational roots which eliminates possible factors of degree 1 since a decomposition into two quadratic factors could also be possible Indirect after transformation edit Often Eisenstein s criterion does not apply for any prime number It may however be that it applies for some prime number to the polynomial obtained after substitution for some integer a of x a for x The fact that the polynomial after substitution is irreducible then allows concluding that the original polynomial is as well This procedure is known as applying a shift For example consider H x2 x 2 in which the coefficient 1 of x is not divisible by any prime Eisenstein s criterion does not apply to H But if one substitutes x for x 3 in H one obtains the polynomial x2 7x 14 which satisfies Eisenstein s criterion for the prime number 7 Since the substitution is an automorphism of the ring Q x the fact that we obtain an irreducible polynomial after substitution implies that we had an irreducible polynomial originally In this particular example it would have been simpler to argue that H being monic of degree 2 could only be reducible if it had an integer root which it obviously does not however the general principle of trying substitutions in order to make Eisenstein s criterion apply is a useful way to broaden its scope Another possibility to transform a polynomial so as to satisfy the criterion which may be combined with applying a shift is reversing the order of its coefficients provided its constant term is nonzero without which it would be divisible by x anyway This is so because such polynomials are reducible in R x if and only if they are reducible in R x x 1 for any integral domain R and in that ring the substitution of x 1 for x reverses the order of the coefficients in a manner symmetric about the constant coefficient but a following shift in the exponent amounts to multiplication by a unit As an example 2x5 4x2 3 satisfies the criterion for p 2 after reversing its coefficients and being primitive is therefore irreducible in Z x Cyclotomic polynomials edit An important class of polynomials whose irreducibility can be established using Eisenstein s criterion is that of the cyclotomic polynomials for prime numbers p Such a polynomial is obtained by dividing the polynomial xp 1 by the linear factor x 1 corresponding to its obvious root 1 which is its only rational root if p gt 2 x p 1 x 1 x p 1 x p 2 x 1 displaystyle frac x p 1 x 1 x p 1 x p 2 cdots x 1 nbsp Here as in the earlier example of H the coefficients 1 prevent Eisenstein s criterion from applying directly However the polynomial will satisfy the criterion for p after substitution of x 1 for x this gives x 1 p 1 x x p 1 p p 1 x p 2 p 2 x p 1 displaystyle frac x 1 p 1 x x p 1 binom p p 1 x p 2 cdots binom p 2 x binom p 1 nbsp all of whose non leading coefficients are divisible by p by properties of binomial coefficients and whose constant coefficient is equal to p and therefore not divisible by p2 An alternative way to arrive at this conclusion is to use the identity a b p ap bp which is valid in characteristic p and which is based on the same properties of binomial coefficients and gives rise to the Frobenius endomorphism to compute the reduction modulo p of the quotient of polynomials x 1 p 1 x x p 1 p 1 x x p x x p 1 mod p displaystyle frac x 1 p 1 x equiv frac x p 1 p 1 x frac x p x x p 1 pmod p nbsp which means that the non leading coefficients of the quotient are all divisible by p the remaining verification that the constant term of the quotient is p can be done by substituting 1 instead of x 1 for x into the expanded form xp 1 x 1 History editTheodor Schonemann was the first to publish a version of the criterion 1 in 1846 in Crelle s Journal 3 which reads in translation That x a n pF x will be irreducible to the modulus p2 when F x to the modulus p does not contain a factor x a This formulation already incorporates a shift to a in place of 0 the condition on F x means that F a is not divisible by p and so pF a is divisible by p but not by p2 As stated it is not entirely correct in that it makes no assumptions on the degree of the polynomial F x so that the polynomial considered need not be of the degree n that its expression suggests the example x2 p x3 1 x2 p px 1 mod p2 shows the conclusion is not valid without such hypothesis Assuming that the degree of F x does not exceed n the criterion is correct however and somewhat stronger than the formulation given above since if x a n pF x is irreducible modulo p2 it certainly cannot decompose in Z x into non constant factors Subsequently Eisenstein published a somewhat different version in 1850 also in Crelle s Journal 4 This version reads in translation When in a polynomial F x in x of arbitrary degree the coefficient of the highest term is 1 and all following coefficients are whole real complex numbers into which a certain real resp complex prime number m divides and when furthermore the last coefficient is equal to em where e denotes a number not divisible by m then it is impossible to bring F x into the form x m a 1 x m 1 a m x n b 1 x n 1 b n displaystyle left x mu a 1 x mu 1 cdots a mu right left x nu b 1 x nu 1 cdots b nu right nbsp where m n 1 m n deg F x and all a and b are whole real resp complex numbers the equation F x 0 is therefore irreducible Here whole real numbers are ordinary integers and whole complex numbers are Gaussian integers one should similarly interpret real and complex prime numbers The application for which Eisenstein developed his criterion was establishing the irreducibility of certain polynomials with coefficients in the Gaussian integers that arise in the study of the division of the lemniscate into pieces of equal arc length Remarkably Schonemann and Eisenstein once having formulated their respective criteria for irreducibility both immediately apply it to give an elementary proof of the irreducibility of the cyclotomic polynomials for prime numbers a result that Gauss had obtained in his Disquisitiones Arithmeticae with a much more complicated proof In fact Eisenstein adds in a footnote that the only proof for this irreducibility known to him other than that of Gauss is one given by Kronecker in 1845 This shows that he was unaware of the two different proofs of this statement that Schonemann had given in his 1846 article where the second proof was based on the above mentioned criterion This is all the more surprising given the fact that two pages further Eisenstein actually refers for a different matter to the first part of Schonemann s article In a note Notiz that appeared in the following issue of the Journal 5 Schonemann points this out to Eisenstein and indicates that the latter s method is not essentially different from the one he used in the second proof Basic proof editTo prove the validity of the criterion suppose Q satisfies the criterion for the prime number p but that it is nevertheless reducible in Q x from which we wish to obtain a contradiction From Gauss lemma it follows that Q is reducible in Z x as well and in fact can be written as the product Q GH of two non constant polynomials G H in case Q is not primitive one applies the lemma to the primitive polynomial Q c where the integer c is the content of Q to obtain a decomposition for it and multiplies c into one of the factors to obtain a decomposition for Q Now reduce Q GH modulo p to obtain a decomposition in Z pZ x But by hypothesis this reduction for Q leaves its leading term of the form axn for a non zero constant a Z pZ as the only nonzero term But then necessarily the reductions modulo p of G and H also make all non leading terms vanish and cannot make their leading terms vanish since no other decompositions of axn are possible in Z pZ x which is a unique factorization domain In particular the constant terms of G and H vanish in the reduction so they are divisible by p but then the constant term of Q which is their product is divisible by p2 contrary to the hypothesis and one has a contradiction A second proof of Eisenstein s criterion also starts with the assumption that the polynomial Q x is reducible It is shown that this assumption entails a contradiction The assumption that Q x a n x n a n 1 x n 1 a 1 x a 0 displaystyle Q x a n x n a n 1 x n 1 cdots a 1 x a 0 nbsp is reducible means that there are polynomials G x c r x r c r 1 x r 1 c 0 r 1 H x d s x s d s 1 x s 1 d 0 s 1 displaystyle begin aligned G x amp c r x r c r 1 x r 1 cdots c 0 amp amp r geq 1 H x amp d s x s d s 1 x s 1 cdots d 0 amp amp s geq 1 end aligned nbsp Such that Q x G x H x n r s displaystyle Q x G x cdot H x qquad n r s nbsp The coefficient a0 of the polynomial Q x can be divided by the prime p but not by p2 Since a0 c0d0 it is possible to divide c0 or d0 by p but not both One may without loss of generality proceed with a coefficient c0 that can be divided by p andwith a coefficient d0 that cannot be divided by p By the assumption p displaystyle p nbsp does not divide a n displaystyle a n nbsp Because an cr ds neither cr nor ds can be divided by p Thus if a r displaystyle a r nbsp is the r displaystyle r nbsp th coefficient of the reducible polynomial Q displaystyle Q nbsp then possibly with d t 0 displaystyle d t 0 nbsp in case t gt s displaystyle t gt s nbsp a r c r d 0 c r 1 d 1 c 0 d r displaystyle a r c r d 0 c r 1 d 1 cdots c 0 d r nbsp wherein c r d 0 displaystyle c r d 0 nbsp cannot be divided by p displaystyle p nbsp because neither d 0 displaystyle d 0 nbsp nor c r displaystyle c r nbsp can be divided by p displaystyle p nbsp We will prove that c 0 c 1 c r 1 displaystyle c 0 c 1 ldots c r 1 nbsp are all divisible by p As a r displaystyle a r nbsp is also divisible by p by hypothesis of the criterion this implies that c r d 0 a r c r 1 d 1 c 0 d r displaystyle c r d 0 a r left c r 1 d 1 cdots c 0 d r right nbsp is divisible by p a contradiction proving the criterion It is possible to divide c 0 d r displaystyle c 0 d r nbsp by p displaystyle p nbsp because c 0 displaystyle c 0 nbsp can be divided by p displaystyle p nbsp By initial assumption it is possible to divide the coefficient a1 of the polynomial Q x by p Since a 1 c 0 d 1 c 1 d 0 displaystyle a 1 c 0 d 1 c 1 d 0 nbsp and since d0 is not a multiple of p it must be possible to divide c1 by p Analogously by induction c i displaystyle c i nbsp is a multiple of p displaystyle p nbsp for all i lt r displaystyle i lt r nbsp which finishes the proof Advanced explanation editApplying the theory of the Newton polygon for the p adic number field for an Eisenstein polynomial we are supposed to take the lower convex envelope of the points 0 1 1 v1 2 v2 n 1 vn 1 n 0 where vi is the p adic valuation of ai i e the highest power of p dividing it Now the data we are given on the vi for 0 lt i lt n namely that they are at least one is just what we need to conclude that the lower convex envelope is exactly the single line segment from 0 1 to n 0 the slope being 1 n This tells us that each root of Q has p adic valuation 1 n and hence that Q is irreducible over the p adic field since for instance no product of any proper subset of the roots has integer valuation and a fortiori over the rational number field This argument is much more complicated than the direct argument by reduction mod p It does however allow one to see in terms of algebraic number theory how frequently Eisenstein s criterion might apply after some change of variable and so limit severely the possible choices of p with respect to which the polynomial could have an Eisenstein translate that is become Eisenstein after an additive change of variables as in the case of the p th cyclotomic polynomial In fact only primes p ramifying in the extension of Q generated by a root of Q have any chance of working These can be found in terms of the discriminant of Q For example in the case x2 x 2 given above the discriminant is 7 so that 7 is the only prime that has a chance of making it satisfy the criterion Modulo 7 it becomes x 3 2 a repeated root is inevitable since the discriminant is 0 mod 7 Therefore the variable shift is actually something predictable Again for the cyclotomic polynomial it becomes x 1 p 1 mod p the discriminant can be shown to be up to sign pp 2 by linear algebra methods More precisely only totally ramified primes have a chance of being Eisenstein primes for the polynomial In quadratic fields ramification is always total so the distinction is not seen in the quadratic case like x2 x 2 above In fact Eisenstein polynomials are directly linked to totally ramified primes as follows if a field extension of the rationals is generated by the root of a polynomial that is Eisenstein at p then p is totally ramified in the extension and conversely if p is totally ramified in a number field then the field is generated by the root of an Eisenstein polynomial at p 6 Generalization editGeneralized criterion edit Given an integral domain D let Q i 0 n a i x i displaystyle Q sum i 0 n a i x i nbsp be an element of D x the polynomial ring with coefficients in D Suppose there exists a prime ideal p of D such that ai p for each i n an p and a0 p2 where p2 is the ideal product of p with itself Then Q cannot be written as a product of two non constant polynomials in D x If in addition Q is primitive i e it has no non trivial constant divisors then it is irreducible in D x If D is a unique factorization domain with field of fractions F then by Gauss s lemma Q is irreducible in F x whether or not it is primitive since constant factors are invertible in F x in this case a possible choice of prime ideal is the principal ideal generated by any irreducible element of D The latter statement gives original theorem for D Z or in Eisenstein s formulation for D Z i Proof edit The proof of this generalization is similar to the one for the original statement considering the reduction of the coefficients modulo p the essential point is that a single term polynomial over the integral domain D p cannot decompose as a product in which at least one of the factors has more than one term because in such a product there can be no cancellation in the coefficient either of the highest or the lowest possible degree Example edit After Z one of the basic examples of an integral domain is the polynomial ring D k u in the variable u over the field k In this case the principal ideal generated by u is a prime ideal Eisenstein s criterion can then be used to prove the irreducibility of a polynomial such as Q x x3 ux u in D x Indeed u does not divide a3 u2 does not divide a0 and u divides a0 a1 and a2 This shows that this polynomial satisfies the hypotheses of the generalization of Eisenstein s criterion for the prime ideal p u since for a principal ideal u being an element of u is equivalent to being divisible by u See also editCohn s irreducibility criterion Perron s irreducibility criterionNotes edit a b Cox 2011 Dorwart 1935 Schonemann 1846 p 100 Eisenstein 1850 p 166 Schonemann 1850 p 188 Frohlich 1967 Local fields in Cassels and Frohlich ed Algebraic number theory pp 22 23 References editCox David A 2011 Why Eisenstein proved the Eisenstein criterion and why Schonemann discovered it first American Mathematical Monthly 118 1 3 31 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 398 3440 doi 10 4169 amer math monthly 118 01 003 S2CID 15978494 Dorwart H L 1935 Irreducibility of polynomials American Mathematical Monthly 42 6 369 381 doi 10 2307 2301357 JSTOR 2301357 Eisenstein Gotthold 1850 Uber die Irreductibilitat und einige andere Eigenschaften der Gleichung von welcher die Theilung der ganzen Lemniscate abhangt Journal fur die reine und angewandte Mathematik 1850 39 160 179 doi 10 1515 crll 1850 39 160 S2CID 122322672 Garling D J H 1986 A Course in Galois Theory Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 31249 3 Algebraic equation Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Schonemann Theodor 1846 Von denjenigen Moduln welche Potenzen von Primzahlen sind Journal fur die reine und angewandte Mathematik 1846 32 93 118 doi 10 1515 crll 1846 32 93 S2CID 120510090 Schonemann Theodor 1850 Uber einige von Herrn Dr Eisenstein aufgestellte Lehrsatze irreductible Congruenzen betreffend S 182 Bd 39 dieses Journals Journal fur die reine und angewandte Mathematik 1850 40 185 188 doi 10 1515 crll 1850 40 185 S2CID 199547075 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eisenstein 27s criterion amp oldid 1186960668, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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