A field (K,+,0,∗,1) is given, and it is a finite field with 25 elements. P is the prime field over K. Further it was given that a polynomial r(x):=x^2+x+1 in P[x] is irreducible.

Juan Lowe

Juan Lowe

Answered question

2022-11-02

Finite field adjunction - isomorphism that maps from the field into a polynomial ring factored over an ideal
A field ( K , + , 0 , , 1 ) is given, and it is a finite field with 25 elements. P is the prime field over K. Further it was given that a polynomial r ( x ) := x 2 + x + 1 P [ x ] is irreducible.
Now, the polynomial y 2 + y + 1 K [ x ] has two non-equal zeros in K, say α 1 α 2 .
The question is to describe all possible isomorphisms:
φ : K P [ x ] / ( r )
by giving the values of φ ( α 1 ) and φ ( α 2 ).
There are a few things that I don't understand about this question.
First of all, what are the properties of K[y] apart from it being a polynomial ring? I think that the additive group ( K , + , 0 ) should be isomorph to a cyclic group C 5 × C 5 - can that help me in any way?
Then - when I try to find the α 1 and α 2 I do my calculations in the Modulo 25 arithmetic - is that right (because I failed to find the zeros)?
And since the φ ( k ) = k + ( r ) is one of the possibilites to describe this isomorphism, my question is - are there any more of them? Because my textbook doesn't state that this isomorphism is unique.
Any kind of help - or a link to some other question is more than welcome.

Answer & Explanation

ustalovatfog

ustalovatfog

Beginner2022-11-03Added 11 answers

Step 1
The polynomial r has two roots in K, α 1 and α 2 . Their images must also be roots of the polynomial r in P[x]/(r). The notation here can be confusing since x P [ x ] / ( r ) is an element of the field.
Let's compute the roots of y 2 + y + 1 in P[x]/(r). They must be of the form a x + b for a , b P, which is a root if and only if a 2 x 2 + 2 a b x + b 2 + a x + b + 1 = a 2 x 2 + ( 2 a b + a ) x + ( b 2 + b + 1 ) = 0. This must be divisible by x 2 + x + 1, and a is non-zero since r is irreducible over P, so a 2 = 2 a b + a = b 2 + b + 1. Hence a = 2 b + 1 and ( 2 b + 1 ) 2 = b 2 + b + 1, so b ( b + 1 ) = 0. Hence the roots are x and x 1.
Step 2
This is somewhat ad-hoc. This can be clarified and generalized by thinking about homomorphisms P [ x ] / ( r ) K, which are determined by where x goes. The image of x must also be a root of r, so the only possibilities are if the image of x is α 1 or α 2 . These actually define homomorphisms since r is irreducible, so the kernel of the evaluation map P [ x ] K, x α i is (r).
Laila Murphy

Laila Murphy

Beginner2022-11-04Added 3 answers

Step 1
This is not in any way an answer to your question.Your elements of the field K are expressions of the form a + b x with a , b P. You add them in the obvious way, always treating a and b as things modulo 5, and you multiply them by replacing x 2 by 1 x = 4 + 4 x every time that you see an x 2 .
Step 2
Why don’t you take an element like 2 + 3 x and write down a few of its first powers? I mean ( 2 + 3 x ) 2 , ( 2 + 3 x ) 3 , etc. If you’re enthusiastic, why don’t you write down all its powers, up to the twenty-fourth?
I promise you that by this exercise you will gain much more insight into the situation than by contemplating head-on the question put to you.

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