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Resultant

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In mathematics, the resultant of two monic polynomials P and Q over a field k is defined as the product

\mathrm{res}(P,Q) = \prod_{(x,y):\,P(x)=0,\, Q(y)=0} (x-y),\,

of the differences of their roots, where x and y take on values in the algebraic closure of k. For non-monic polynomials with leading coefficients p and q, respectively, the above product is multiplied by

p^{\deg Q} q^{\deg P}.\,

Contents

[edit] Computation

  • When Q is separable, the above product can be rewritten to
\mathrm{res}(P,Q) = \prod_{P(x)=0} Q(x)\,
and this expression remains unchanged if Q is reduced modulo P. Note that, when non-monic, this includes the factor qdegP but still needs the factor pdegQ.
  • Let P' = P \mod Q. The above idea can be continued by swapping the roles of P' and Q. However, P' has a set of roots different from that of P. This can be resolved by writing \prod_{Q(y)=0} P'(y)\, as a determinant again, where P' has leading zero coefficients. This determinant can now be simplified by iterative expansion with respect to the column, where only the leading coefficient q of Q appears.
\mathrm{res}(P,Q) = q^{\deg P - \deg P'} \cdot \mathrm{res}(P',Q)
Continuing this procedure ends up in a variant of the Euclidean algorithm. This procedure needs quadratic runtime.

[edit] Properties

  • \mathrm{res}(P,Q) = (-1)^{\deg P \cdot \deg Q} \cdot \mathrm{res}(Q,P)
  • \mathrm{res}(P\cdot R,Q) = \mathrm{res}(P,Q) \cdot \mathrm{res}(R,Q)
  • If P' = P + R * Q and degP' = degP, then res(P,Q) = res(P',Q)
  • If X,Y,P,Q have the same degree and X = a_{00}\cdot P + a_{01}\cdot Q, Y = a_{10}\cdot P + a_{11}\cdot Q,
then \mathrm{res}(X,Y) = \det{\begin{pmatrix} a_{00} & a_{01} \\ a_{10} & a_{11} \end{pmatrix}}^{\deg P} \cdot \mathrm{res}(P,Q)
  • res(P ,Q) = res(Q ,P) where P (z) = P( − z)

[edit] Applications

  • The resultant of a polynomial and its derivative is related to the discriminant.
  • Resultants can be used in algebraic geometry to determine intersections. For example, let
f(x,y) = 0
and
g(x,y) = 0
define algebraic curves in \mathbb{A}^2_k. If f and g are viewed as polynomials in x with coefficients in k(y), then the resultant of f and g gives a polynomial in y whose roots are the y-coordinates of the intersection of the curves.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

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