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  2. Monic polynomial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monic_polynomial

    In algebra, a monic polynomial is a non-zero univariate polynomial (that is, a polynomial in a single variable) in which the leading coefficient (the nonzero coefficient of highest degree) is equal to 1.

  3. Completing the square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Completing_the_square

    Given a quadratic polynomial of the form + + it is possible to factor out the coefficient a, and then complete the square for the resulting monic polynomial. Example: + + = [+ +] = [(+) +] = (+) + = (+) + This process of factoring out the coefficient a can further be simplified by only factorising it out of the first 2 terms.

  4. Companion matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Companion_matrix

    The roots of the characteristic polynomial () are the eigenvalues of ().If there are n distinct eigenvalues , …,, then () is diagonalizable as () =, where D is the diagonal matrix and V is the Vandermonde matrix corresponding to the λ 's: = [], = [].

  5. Minimal polynomial (linear algebra) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimal_polynomial_(linear...

    In linear algebra, the minimal polynomial μ A of an n × n matrix A over a field F is the monic polynomial P over F of least degree such that P(A) = 0. Any other polynomial Q with Q(A) = 0 is a (polynomial) multiple of μ A. The following three statements are equivalent: λ is a root of μ A, λ is a root of the characteristic polynomial χ A ...

  6. Newton's identities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton's_identities

    Applied to a monic polynomial, these formulae express the coefficients in terms of the power sums of the roots: replace each e i by a i and each p k by s k. Expressing complete homogeneous symmetric polynomials in terms of power sums

  7. Minimal polynomial (field theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimal_polynomial_(field...

    The minimal polynomial f of α is unique.. To prove this, suppose that f and g are monic polynomials in J α of minimal degree n > 0. We have that r := f−g ∈ J α (because the latter is closed under addition/subtraction) and that m := deg(r) < n (because the polynomials are monic of the same degree).

  8. Resolvent cubic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resolvent_cubic

    Graph of the polynomial function x 4 + x 3 – x 2 – 7x/4 – 1/2 (in green) together with the graph of its resolvent cubic R 4 (y) (in red). The roots of both polynomials are visible too. In algebra, a resolvent cubic is one of several distinct, although related, cubic polynomials defined from a monic polynomial of degree four:

  9. Finite field - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finite_field

    The polynomial factors into linear factors over a field of order q. More precisely, this polynomial is the product of all monic polynomials of degree one over a field of order q. This implies that, if q = p n then X q − X is the product of all monic irreducible polynomials over GF(p), whose degree divides n.