Mason–Stothers theorem
Template:Short description The Mason–Stothers theorem, or simply Mason's theorem, is a mathematical theorem about polynomials, analogous to the abc conjecture for integers. It is named after Walter Wilson Stothers, who published it in 1981,[1] and R. C. Mason, who rediscovered it shortly thereafter.[2]
The theorem states:
- Let Template:Math, Template:Math, and Template:Math be relatively prime polynomials over a field such that Template:Math and such that not all of them have vanishing derivative. Then
Here Template:Math is the product of the distinct irreducible factors of Template:Mvar. For algebraically closed fields it is the polynomial of minimum degree that has the same roots as Template:Mvar; in this case Template:Math gives the number of distinct roots of Template:Mvar.[3]
Examples
- Over fields of characteristic 0 the condition that Template:Mvar, Template:Mvar, and Template:Mvar do not all have vanishing derivative is equivalent to the condition that they are not all constant. Over fields of characteristic Template:Math it is not enough to assume that they are not all constant. For example, considered as polynomials over some field of characteristic p, the identity Template:Math gives an example where the maximum degree of the three polynomials (Template:Mvar and Template:Mvar as the summands on the left hand side, and Template:Mvar as the right hand side) is Template:Mvar, but the degree of the radical is only Template:Math.
- Taking Template:Math and Template:Math gives an example where equality holds in the Mason–Stothers theorem, showing that the inequality is in some sense the best possible.
- A corollary of the Mason–Stothers theorem is the analog of Fermat's Last Theorem for function fields: if Template:Math for Template:Mvar, Template:Mvar, Template:Mvar relatively prime polynomials over a field of characteristic not dividing Template:Mvar and Template:Math then either at least one of Template:Mvar, Template:Mvar, or Template:Mvar is 0 or they are all constant.
Proof
Template:Harvtxt gave the following elementary proof of the Mason–Stothers theorem.[4]
Step 1. The condition Template:Math implies that the Wronskians Template:Math, Template:Math, and Template:Math are all equal. Write Template:Mvar for their common value.
Step 2. The condition that at least one of the derivatives Template:Math, Template:Math, or Template:Math is nonzero and that Template:Mvar, Template:Mvar, and Template:Mvar are coprime is used to show that Template:Mvar is nonzero. For example, if Template:Math then Template:Math so Template:Mvar divides Template:Math (as Template:Mvar and Template:Mvar are coprime) so Template:Math (as Template:Math unless Template:Mvar is constant).
Step 3. Template:Mvar is divisible by each of the greatest common divisors Template:Math, Template:Math, and Template:Math. Since these are coprime it is divisible by their product, and since Template:Mvar is nonzero we get
Step 4. Substituting in the inequalities
- Template:Math − (number of distinct roots of Template:Mvar)
- Template:Math − (number of distinct roots of Template:Mvar)
- Template:Math − (number of distinct roots of Template:Mvar)
(where the roots are taken in some algebraic closure) and
we find that
which is what we needed to prove.
Generalizations
There is a natural generalization in which the ring of polynomials is replaced by a one-dimensional function field. Let Template:Mvar be an algebraically closed field of characteristic 0, let Template:Math be a smooth projective curve of genus Template:Mvar, let
- be rational functions on Template:Mvar satisfying ,
and let Template:Mvar be a set of points in Template:Math containing all of the zeros and poles of Template:Mvar and Template:Mvar. Then
Here the degree of a function in Template:Math is the degree of the map it induces from Template:Mvar to P1. This was proved by Mason, with an alternative short proof published the same year by J. H. Silverman .[5]
There is a further generalization, due independently to J. F. Voloch[6] and to W. D. Brownawell and D. W. Masser,[7] that gives an upper bound for Template:Mvar-variable Template:Mvar-unit equations Template:Math provided that no subset of the Template:Math are Template:Mvar-linearly dependent. Under this assumption, they prove that
References
External links
- Template:Mathworld
- Mason-Stothers Theorem and the ABC Conjecture, Vishal Lama. A cleaned-up version of the proof from Lang's book.