Let f(x)=x^n+5x^(n−1)+3 where n≥1 is an integer. Prove that f(x) can't be expressed as the product of two polynomials each of which has all its coefficients integers and degree >=1.

Adrian Brown

Adrian Brown

Answered question

2022-11-16

Let f ( x ) = x n + 5 x n 1 + 3 where n 1 is an integer. Prove that f ( x ) can't be expressed as the product of two polynomials each of which has all its coefficients integers and degree 1.

Answer & Explanation

h2a2l1i2morz

h2a2l1i2morz

Beginner2022-11-17Added 19 answers

The notation [ x t ] P ( x ) denotes the coefficient of x t in polynomial P ( x )
Suppose that f ( x ) = g ( x ) h ( x ), where g ( x ) , h ( x ) are monic polynomials, g ( x ) , h ( x ) Z [ x ] and deg g > 0, deg h > 0, deg g + deg h = n. Let g ( x ) = k α k x k , h ( x ) = k β k x k , where α k , β k is integer whenever k 0
First, we have α 0 β 0 = 3, so | α 0 | = 3 and | β 0 | = 1 or | α 0 | = 1 and | β 0 | = 3. WLOG, suppose that | α 0 | = 3 and | β 0 | = 1. Let m is the smallest positive integer such that 3 α m (such m exists because g(x) is monic). Now we have
[ z m ] f ( x ) = α 0 β m + α 1 β m 1 + + α m β 0 α m β 0 0 ( mod 3 )
So m n 1, and deg g n 1, thus deg h 1, hence deg h = 1, and h ( x ) = x + β 0 , where β 0 = ± 1, so h ( β 0 ) = 0, and f ( β 0 ) = 0, but it's obvious that f ( ± 1 ) 0, Q.E.D.

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