Showing Difference of Relatively Prime Polynomials is Irreducible

slamminsammya
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Homework Statement


Let K be a field, and f,g are relatively prime in K[x]. Show that f-yg is irreducible in K(y)[x].


Homework Equations


There exist polynomials a,b\in K[x] such that af+bg=u where u\in K. We also have the Euclidean algorithm for polynomials.


The Attempt at a Solution


Assuming towards a contradiction that f-yg were reducible, we have f-yg=hk where h,k\in K(y)[x] are not units. Then by the relative primacy condition we also have af+bg=1, so that multiplying both sides by hk yields hk(af+bg)=hk=f-yg, but this is a contradiction since f-yg is certainly not in our original ring of polynomials (assuming that y\notin K), but the left hand side is most certainly in the original ring. The problem is I don't feel confident at all in this argument. I am having trouble conceptualizing what f-yg is.
 
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slamminsammya said:
...multiplying both sides by hk yields hk(af+bg)=hk=f-yg, but this is a contradiction since f-yg is certainly not in our original ring of polynomials (assuming that y\notin K),
Correct.
slamminsammya said:
but the left hand side is most certainly in the original ring.
This is incorrect. Each part of the equation hk(af+bg)=hk=f-yg was derived by directly applying noncontradictory definitions (namely (i) af+bg := 1 and (ii) hk := f-yg), so you won't be able to get a contradiction without doing something else.
 
slamminsammya said:
The problem is I don't feel confident at all in this argument. I am having trouble conceptualizing what f-yg is.

Think of y as a constant (which is what it is). It might help to use a different letter, say \alpha, instead of y for the time being so you don't accidentally forget it's not a variable.
 
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