Fundamental Theorem of Algebra: Difference between revisions

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imported>Michael Hardy
(Gauss proved it in 1799.)
imported>Michael Hardy
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===Using complex analysis===
===Using complex analysis===


A startlingly simple proof is based on [[Liouville's theorem]]: If <math> p(z)</math> is a polynomial function of a complex variable then both <math> p(z)</math> and <math> 1/p(z)</math> will be [[holomorphic]] in any domain where <math> p(z) \ne 0</math>. But, by the triangle inequality, we know that outside a neighborhood of the origin <math> |p(z)| > |p(0)|</math>, so if there is no <math> z_0 </math> such that <math> p(z_0) = 0</math>, we know that <math>1/p(z)</math> is a bounded entire (i.e., holomorphic in all of <math>\mathbb{C}</math>) function. By [[Liouville's theorem]], it must be constant, so <math>p(z)</math> must also be constant.
A startlingly simple proof is based on [[Liouville's theorem]]: If <math> p(z)</math> is a polynomial function of a complex variable then both <math> p(z)</math> and <math> 1/p(z)</math> will be [[holomorphic]] in any domain where <math>\scriptstyle p(z) \ne 0</math>. But, by the triangle inequality, we know that outside a neighborhood of the origin <math> |p(z)| > |p(0)|</math>, so if there is no <math> z_0 </math> such that <math> p(z_0) = 0</math>, we know that <math>1/p(z)</math> is a bounded entire (i.e., holomorphic in all of <math>\mathbb{C}</math>) function. By [[Liouville's theorem]], it must be constant, so <math>p(z)</math> must also be constant.


===Using algebra (and a bit of real analysis)===
===Using algebra (and a bit of real analysis)===

Revision as of 16:32, 22 May 2007

The Fundamental Theorem of Algebra is a mathematical theorem stating that every nonconstant polynomial whose coefficients are complex numbers has at least one complex number as a root. In other words, given any polynomial

(where is any positive integer), we can find a complex number so that

One important case of the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra is that every nonconstant polynomial with real coefficients must have at least one complex root. Since it is not true that every such polynomial has to have at least one real root (as the example demonstrates), many mathematicians feel that the complex numbers form the most natural setting for working with polynomials.

In fact, a stronger version of the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra is also true: a polynomial of degree can be factored completely into a product of Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle d} linear polynomials:

Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle p(x) = c_d (x-t_1) (x-t_2) \cdots (x-t_d). }

A way of saying this is that every polynomial of degree has exactly complex roots, "counting multiplicity".

Carl Friedrich Gauss is generally credited with the first satisfactory proof of this theorem, his proof being the principal result in his Ph.D. thesis finished in 1799.

Proving the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra

Using complex analysis

A startlingly simple proof is based on Liouville's theorem: If is a polynomial function of a complex variable then both and will be holomorphic in any domain where . But, by the triangle inequality, we know that outside a neighborhood of the origin , so if there is no such that , we know that is a bounded entire (i.e., holomorphic in all of ) function. By Liouville's theorem, it must be constant, so must also be constant.

Using algebra (and a bit of real analysis)

There are also proofs that do not depend on complex analysis, but they require more algebraic or topological machinery.

We need to show that any algebraic extension of has degree one. Since , any such field extension also extends . Now, any algebraic over must also be algebraic over , but its minimal polynomial cannot be of odd degree, because any such polynomial must have a real root by the intermediate value theorem, so the splitting field of over must have degree a power of 2. Its Galois group must have normal subgroup of index 2, but a generating element must already be in by the quadratic formula. This shows that the extension has, at most, degree 2, but appealing once again to the quadratic formula, we see that is closed under quadratic extensions, so must itself be algebraically closed.

Further reading

  • Fine, Benjamin; Rosenberger, Gerhard (1997). The Fundamental Theorem of Algebra. Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-94657-8.