In mathematics, the adjective irreducible means that
an object cannot be expressed as a product of at least two
non-trivial factors in a given ring. See also factorization.
For any field F, the ring
of polynomials with coefficients in
F is denoted by F[x]. A polynomial
p(x) in F[x] is called
irreducible over F, if it is non-constant and cannot be
represented as the product of two or more non-constant
polynomials from F[x].
This definition depends on the field F. Some simple
examples will be discussed below.
Galois theory studies the relationship between a field,
its Galois group, and its irreducible polynomials in depth.
Interesting and non-trivial applications can be found in the
study of finite fields.
It is helpful to compare irreducible polynomials to
prime numbers: prime numbers (together with the
corresponding negative numbers of equal modulus) are the
irreducible integers. They exhibit many of the general properties
of the concept 'irreducibility' that equally apply to irreducible
polynomials, such as the essentially unique factorization into
prime or irreducible factors:
Every polynomial p(x) in F[x]
can be factorized into polynomials that are irreducible over F.
This factorization is unique up to permutation of the
factors and the multiplication of constants from F to the
factors.
Simple examples
The following three polynomials demonstrate some
elementary properties of reducible and irreducible
polynomials:
,
,
.
Over the field Q of rational numbers,
the first polynomial p1(x) is reducible,
but the other two polynomials are irreducible.
Over the field R of real numbers,
the two polynomials p1(x) and p2(x)
are reducible, but p3(x) is still irreducible.
Over the field C of complex numbers, all
three polynomials are reducible.
In fact over C, every non-constant polynomial can be
factored into linear factors
where an is the leading coefficient of the polynomial
and
are the zeros of p(z).
Hence, all irreducible polynomials are of degree 1.
This is the Fundamental theorem of algebra.
Note: The existence of an essentially unique factorization
p3(x) = x2 + 1 = (x - i)(x + i)
of p3(x) into factors that do not belong to
Q[x] implies that this polynomial is irreducible
over Q:
there cannot be another factorization.
These examples demonstrate the relationship between the zeros of a polynomial (solutions of an algebraic equation)
and the factorization of the polynomial into linear factors.
The existence of irreducible polynomials of degree greater
than one (without zeros in the original field) historically motivated
the extension of that original number field
so that even these polynomials can be reduced into linear factors:
from rational numbers to real numbers and further to complex
numbers.
For algebraic purposes, the extension from rational numbers to
real numbers is often too 'radical':
It introduces transcendental numbers (that are not the solutions of
algebraic equations with rational coefficients). These numbers are not
needed for the algebraic purpose of factorizing polynomials (but they
are necessary for the use of real numbers in analysis). Thus,
there is a purely algebraic process to extend
a given field F with a given polynomial p(x) to a
larger field where this polynomial p(x) can be reduced
into linear factors. The study of such extensions is the starting point
of Galois theory.
Generalization
If R is an integral domain, an element f of R which is neither zero nor a unit is called irreducible if there are no non-units g and h with f = gh. One can show that every prime element is irreducible; the converse is not true in general but holds in unique factorization domains. The polynomial ring F[x] over a field F is a unique factorization domain.