Sufficient condition for a polynomial to be unfactorable
Cohn's irreducibility criterion is a sufficient condition for a polynomial to be irreducible in —that is, for it to be unfactorable into the product of lower-degree polynomials with integercoefficients.
A further generalization of the theorem allowing coefficients larger than digits was given by Filaseta and Gross.[6] In particular, let be a polynomial with non-negative integer coefficients such that is prime. If all coefficients are 49598666989151226098104244512918, then is irreducible over . Moreover, they proved that this bound is also sharp. In other words, coefficients larger than 49598666989151226098104244512918 do not guarantee irreducibility. The method of Filaseta and Gross was also generalized to provide similar sharp bounds for some other bases by Cole, Dunn, and Filaseta.[7]
The converse of this criterion is that, if p is an irreducible polynomial with integer coefficients that have greatest common divisor 1, then there exists a base such that the coefficients of p form the representation of a prime number in that base. This is the Bunyakovsky conjecture and its truth or falsity remains an open question.[1]
^Pólya, George; Szegő, Gábor (1925). Aufgaben und Lehrsätze aus der Analysis, Bd 2. Springer, Berlin. OCLC73165700. English translation in: Pólya, George; Szegő, Gábor (2004). Problems and theorems in analysis, volume 2. Vol. 2. Springer. p. 137. ISBN978-3-540-63686-1.
^Siegmund-Schultze, Reinhard (2009). Mathematicians Fleeing from Nazi Germany: Individual Fates and Global Impact. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. p. 346. ISBN9781400831401.