Hello Kitty
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I'm trying to prove that GL(2,p^n) has a cyclic subgroup of order p^{2n} - 1. This should be generated by
\left( \begin{array}{cc}<br /> 0 & 1 \\<br /> -\lambda & -\mu \end{array} \right)
where X^2 + \mu X + \lambda is a polynomial over F_{p^n} such that one of its roots has multiplicative order q^{2n} - 1 in its splitting field.
Now since the above matrix satisfies its own characteristic polynomial, X^2 + \mu X + \lambda, I believe this somehow implies that it has order q^{2n} - 1.
The problem is that my Galois Theory isn't up to scratch so I don't have a clue how to justify this.
Here are some of my thoughts: I think I'm right in saying that any splitting field of F_{p^n} is of the form F_{p^{mn}}. For a quadratic is it always F_{p^{2n}}? A primitive element of F_{p^{2n}} would clearly have the desired order.
\left( \begin{array}{cc}<br /> 0 & 1 \\<br /> -\lambda & -\mu \end{array} \right)
where X^2 + \mu X + \lambda is a polynomial over F_{p^n} such that one of its roots has multiplicative order q^{2n} - 1 in its splitting field.
Now since the above matrix satisfies its own characteristic polynomial, X^2 + \mu X + \lambda, I believe this somehow implies that it has order q^{2n} - 1.
The problem is that my Galois Theory isn't up to scratch so I don't have a clue how to justify this.
Here are some of my thoughts: I think I'm right in saying that any splitting field of F_{p^n} is of the form F_{p^{mn}}. For a quadratic is it always F_{p^{2n}}? A primitive element of F_{p^{2n}} would clearly have the desired order.