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Composition of polynomials

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 January 2015

B. Sury*
Affiliation:
Stat-Math Unit, Indian Statistical Institute, 8th Mile Mysore Road, Bangalore 560059, India, e-mail:[email protected]

Extract

The motivation to write this paper arose out of the following problem which was posed in a recent mathematical olympiad:

Given a polynomial P(X) with integer coefficients, show that there exist non-zero polynomials Q(X), R(X) with integer coefficients such that P(X)Q(X) is a polynomial in X2 and P(X)R(X) is a polynomial in X3.

For instance, if P(X) = 2 − 5X + 3X2 + 12X3, then we notice that Q (X) = 2 + 5X + 3X2 − 12X3 serves the purpose for the first part, viz.

A moment's thought makes it fairly evident that this trick easily solves the first part of the problem for a general polynomial P(X).

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Mathematical Association 2013

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References

1. Macmahon, P. A., Combinatory analysis, Cambridge University Press (1915-1916).Google Scholar