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bingo92
Dec14-11, 12:15 AM
find the irreducible quadratic factors of z^(4)+4
3. The attempt at a solution
Im stumped...this is all ive got:
[(z^(2))^2]-[(2i)^2]
(z^(2)-2i)(z^2+2i)
Any guidance is greatly appreciated!
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data
2. Relevant equations
3. The attempt at a solution
Mentallic
Dec14-11, 02:24 AM
So you've already noticed that a difference of two squares won't work. The way to answer this is a little more complicated.
Can you find all the complex roots of that polynomial?
Also, notice that if we have a complex root of the form \alpha=rcis(\theta) and its conjugate \overline{\alpha}=rcis(-\theta) then
(z-\alpha)(z-\overline{\alpha})=(z^2-(\alpha+\overline{\alpha})z+\alpha\overline{\alpha })
and
\alpha+\overline{\alpha}=2rcos\theta
\alpha\overline{\alpha}=r^2
which are both real, which tells us if two roots are conjugates of each other then the quadratic that has those roots is real and obviously irreducible.
eumyang
Dec14-11, 05:31 AM
I tried equating coefficients. I assume that the factorization will be in the form of
(z2 + az + b)(z2 + cz + d).
Multiply the trinomials and you'll have a 5-term polynomial:
z4 + ?z3 + ?z2 + ?z + bd
(I'll let you fill in the "?").
Let this equal z4 + 4. This means that the coefficients for z3, z2 and z must be zero. You'll end up with 4 equations and 4 unknowns. Since solving this particular system is daunting, you could make some assumptions as to what b and d are. If you let b = d = 2, the system reduces quite nicely, and you'll find a and c easily enough.
I wouldn't say that this method can be used to factor any quartic in the form of z4 + c to irreducible quadratics. I only tried it because the constant term in the quartic is small.
Mentallic
Dec14-11, 07:17 AM
I tried equating coefficients. I assume that the factorization will be in the form of
(z2 + az + b)(z2 + cz + d).
Multiply the trinomials and you'll have a 5-term polynomial:
z4 + ?z3 + ?z2 + ?z + bd
(I'll let you fill in the "?").
Let this equal z4 + 4. This means that the coefficients for z3, z2 and z must be zero. You'll end up with 4 equations and 4 unknowns. Since solving this particular system is daunting, you could make some assumptions as to what b and d are. If you let b = d = 2, the system reduces quite nicely, and you'll find a and c easily enough.
I wouldn't say that this method can be used to factor any quartic in the form of z4 + c to irreducible quadratics. I only tried it because the constant term in the quartic is small.
While that way works too, I'm pretty sure the expected method is the one that I pointed towards.
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