If a polynomial is zero on a field F, is it zero on every extension of F? Let p be a univariate polynomial over a field F, and let K be an extension of F.

Filloltarninsv9p

Filloltarninsv9p

Answered question

2022-11-11

If a polynomial is zero on a field F, is it zero on every extension of F?
Let p be a univariate polynomial over a field F, and let K be an extension of F.
If p ( x ) = 0 for all x F, does this imply that p ( x ) = 0 for all x K? How about if p is multivariate?
For context, I'm trying to understand if doing Schwartz-Zippel-style arithmetic circuit identity-testing over a large enough extension field gives the right answer when the degree of the expression may be high.

Answer & Explanation

embutiridsl

embutiridsl

Beginner2022-11-12Added 26 answers

Step 1
No. Take p ( X ) = X ( X + 1 ), F = F 2 , K = F 4
Step 2
Indeed, let β F 4 F 2 . We know that β 2 + β = 1, that is, p ( β ) = 1. And p ( 0 ) = p ( 1 ) = 0.

Do you have a similar question?

Recalculate according to your conditions!

Ask your question.
Get an expert answer.

Let our experts help you. Answer in as fast as 15 minutes.

Didn't find what you were looking for?