PsychonautQQ said:
I'm going to call epsilon 'a'. So divide x^3+2x+1 by x-a? or a^3+2a+1 by x-a? It's possible to do the long division with 2 variables?
What do you do in case of ##\mathbb{R} \subseteq \mathbb{R} [ i ] \cong \mathbb{C}## ? Here it is ##x^2+1=(x-i)(x+i)##.
And, yes, it is possible. Simply follow strictly the rules of division and the fact, that for your remainder ##a^3+2a+1=0## holds.
As a hint: it is better to do the subtractions very explicitly like
$$\begin{align*} 238 : (-7) = (-3) ... \\ - ((-7) \cdot (-3)) \;\;\;\;\;\; \\ \text{_________________} \\ +23 - (+21) (8) \\ \text{_________________} \\ 28 \\ etc.\end{align*}$$
Also, the automorphisms of Z/Z3 are M(1)=1 or M(1)=2, so the only useful automorphism will take M(a)=a^2.
You need to consider all automorphisms ##\sigma \, : \, \mathbb{Z}_3[a] \rightarrow \mathbb{Z}_3[a]## which leave all elements of ##\mathbb{Z}_3## invariant, i.e. possible values of ##\sigma(a)## are the key here. The degree of ##\mathbb{Z}_3 [ a ] ## over ##\mathbb{Z}_3## tells you how many there are. ## id_{\mathbb{Z}_3 [ a ] } ## is one of them. But you don't need to use them, if you haven't read or learned about this yet. Just go on with the factorization of ##x^3+2x+1## to see whether all of your roots are already in ##\mathbb{Z}_3 [ a ] ##.
PsychonautQQ said:
So, since the only non-trivial automorphism of Z/Z3={0,1,2} equivalence classes is M(1)=2. Will the element that I'm going to extend Z/Z3 with be an equivalence class as well? It must be right?
There is no need to think about equivalence classes anymore. ##\mathbb{Z} / 3\mathbb{Z} \cong \mathbb{Z}_3 = \{0,1,2\}## and ##\mathbb{Z}_3 [ a ] ## consist of all values ##p(a)## with polynomials ##p(x) \in \mathbb{Z}_3 [ x ] ##, i.e. coefficients in ##\{0,1,2\}## and ##a^3+2a+1=0##.
To interpret ##a## as an equivalence class leads to something of the form ##\mathbb{Z}_3 [ x ] / (p(x))##. Not sure, whether this would be helpful.