MathNugget
Junior Member
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2024
- Messages
- 195
I'm running out of creative names. I decided to skip some stuff from the paper I mentioned earlier .
I'd like to prove: [imath]\frac{\mathbb{Z}[X]/p\mathbb{Z}[X]}{(X^2+tX+q, p)\mathbb{Z}[X]/p\mathbb{Z}[X]}\simeq \frac{\mathbb{Z}[\alpha]}{p\mathbb{Z}[\alpha]}[/imath]
now, the exercise needs a bit more input: the polynomial ([imath]X^2+tX+q[/imath] ) is irreducible in [imath]\mathbb{Z}[X][/imath] (of course, it is in [imath]\mathbb{Q}[X][/imath] too). [imath]\alpha[/imath] is one of the roots (it is in [imath]\mathbb{C}\backslash \mathbb{Q}[/imath] ).
I am trying to find a surjective morphism [imath]\phi: \frac{\mathbb{Z}[X]}{p\mathbb{Z}[X]} \rightarrow \frac{\mathbb{Z}[\alpha]}{p\mathbb{Z}[\alpha]}[/imath].
[imath]\phi(\widehat{f})=\widehat{f(\alpha)}[/imath]. I'll assume believed that [imath]\mathbb{Z}[\alpha][/imath] are [imath]a+b\alpha[/imath], with [imath]a, b \in \mathbb{Z}[/imath] . There is the surjectivity, and then there is the morphism: [imath]\phi(\widehat{f+g})=\widehat{(f+g)(\alpha)}=\widehat{f(\alpha)+g(\alpha)}=\widehat{\phi(f)+\phi(g)}[/imath]. Multiplication seems to go similarly. I realize I didn't really put the hats properly, maybe...
For correct definiteness...if [imath]p \mid (f-g)[/imath], then [imath]p \mid (f(\alpha)-g(\alpha))[/imath] I suppose.
Now I need to prove [imath]ker(\phi)=\frac{(X^2+tX+q, p)\mathbb{Z}[X]}{p\mathbb{Z}[X]}[/imath].
If [imath]\phi(\widehat{f})=\widehat{0}[/imath], then [imath]p \mid f(\alpha)[/imath] in [imath]\mathbb{Z}[\alpha][/imath]. Notice: that means either [imath]f(\alpha)=0[/imath], or [imath]f(X)[/imath] has all coefficients divisible by p.
(Suppose [imath]g(\alpha)=kp[/imath]; then [imath]\alpha[/imath] would be root of g-kp would be a polynomial of same degree as f, with root [imath]\alpha[/imath], which contradicts the uniqueness of f, which I didn't prove here. I suppose we can find some integers c, d such that [imath]deg(cf-d(g-kp))\leq 1[/imath], has integer coefficients, and root [imath]\alpha[/imath], which contradicts it being irrational etc).
As such, [imath]f(X) \in (X^2+tX+q, p)\mathbb{Z}[X][/imath] (I guess this can be proven with double inclusion: on one hand, I proved that f satisfies at least on of these: [imath]f(\alpha)=0[/imath] or [imath]p \mid f(x) \: \forall x[/imath]; on other hand, an element of [imath](X^2+tX+q, p)\mathbb{Z}[X][/imath] is of the form [imath]g_1(X^2+tX+q)+g_2p[/imath], and obviously [imath](g_1(X^2+tX+q)+g_2p)(\alpha)=0+pg_2(\alpha)[/imath], which is divizible by p... [imath]g_1, g_2[/imath] are arbitrary elements of [imath]\mathbb{Z}[X][/imath], by the way...
Then I remember [imath]\phi[/imath] was defined on [imath]\frac{\mathbb{Z}[X]}{p\mathbb{Z}[X]}[/imath], so I get that [imath]ker(\phi)=\frac{(X^2+tX+q, p)\mathbb{Z}[X]}{p\mathbb{Z}[X]}[/imath], and it should be complete...
I'd like to prove: [imath]\frac{\mathbb{Z}[X]/p\mathbb{Z}[X]}{(X^2+tX+q, p)\mathbb{Z}[X]/p\mathbb{Z}[X]}\simeq \frac{\mathbb{Z}[\alpha]}{p\mathbb{Z}[\alpha]}[/imath]
now, the exercise needs a bit more input: the polynomial ([imath]X^2+tX+q[/imath] ) is irreducible in [imath]\mathbb{Z}[X][/imath] (of course, it is in [imath]\mathbb{Q}[X][/imath] too). [imath]\alpha[/imath] is one of the roots (it is in [imath]\mathbb{C}\backslash \mathbb{Q}[/imath] ).
I am trying to find a surjective morphism [imath]\phi: \frac{\mathbb{Z}[X]}{p\mathbb{Z}[X]} \rightarrow \frac{\mathbb{Z}[\alpha]}{p\mathbb{Z}[\alpha]}[/imath].
[imath]\phi(\widehat{f})=\widehat{f(\alpha)}[/imath]. I'll assume believed that [imath]\mathbb{Z}[\alpha][/imath] are [imath]a+b\alpha[/imath], with [imath]a, b \in \mathbb{Z}[/imath] . There is the surjectivity, and then there is the morphism: [imath]\phi(\widehat{f+g})=\widehat{(f+g)(\alpha)}=\widehat{f(\alpha)+g(\alpha)}=\widehat{\phi(f)+\phi(g)}[/imath]. Multiplication seems to go similarly. I realize I didn't really put the hats properly, maybe...
For correct definiteness...if [imath]p \mid (f-g)[/imath], then [imath]p \mid (f(\alpha)-g(\alpha))[/imath] I suppose.
Now I need to prove [imath]ker(\phi)=\frac{(X^2+tX+q, p)\mathbb{Z}[X]}{p\mathbb{Z}[X]}[/imath].
If [imath]\phi(\widehat{f})=\widehat{0}[/imath], then [imath]p \mid f(\alpha)[/imath] in [imath]\mathbb{Z}[\alpha][/imath]. Notice: that means either [imath]f(\alpha)=0[/imath], or [imath]f(X)[/imath] has all coefficients divisible by p.
(Suppose [imath]g(\alpha)=kp[/imath]; then [imath]\alpha[/imath] would be root of g-kp would be a polynomial of same degree as f, with root [imath]\alpha[/imath], which contradicts the uniqueness of f, which I didn't prove here. I suppose we can find some integers c, d such that [imath]deg(cf-d(g-kp))\leq 1[/imath], has integer coefficients, and root [imath]\alpha[/imath], which contradicts it being irrational etc).
As such, [imath]f(X) \in (X^2+tX+q, p)\mathbb{Z}[X][/imath] (I guess this can be proven with double inclusion: on one hand, I proved that f satisfies at least on of these: [imath]f(\alpha)=0[/imath] or [imath]p \mid f(x) \: \forall x[/imath]; on other hand, an element of [imath](X^2+tX+q, p)\mathbb{Z}[X][/imath] is of the form [imath]g_1(X^2+tX+q)+g_2p[/imath], and obviously [imath](g_1(X^2+tX+q)+g_2p)(\alpha)=0+pg_2(\alpha)[/imath], which is divizible by p... [imath]g_1, g_2[/imath] are arbitrary elements of [imath]\mathbb{Z}[X][/imath], by the way...
Then I remember [imath]\phi[/imath] was defined on [imath]\frac{\mathbb{Z}[X]}{p\mathbb{Z}[X]}[/imath], so I get that [imath]ker(\phi)=\frac{(X^2+tX+q, p)\mathbb{Z}[X]}{p\mathbb{Z}[X]}[/imath], and it should be complete...