On the Hansen-Mullen conjecture for self-reciprocal irreducible polynomials (Q439094)
From MaRDI portal
| This is the item page for this Wikibase entity, intended for internal use and editing purposes. Please use this page instead for the normal view: On the Hansen-Mullen conjecture for self-reciprocal irreducible polynomials |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6062683
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | On the Hansen-Mullen conjecture for self-reciprocal irreducible polynomials |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6062683 |
Statements
On the Hansen-Mullen conjecture for self-reciprocal irreducible polynomials (English)
0 references
1 August 2012
0 references
self-reciprocal polynomials
0 references
finite fields
0 references
character sums
0 references
0 references
There has been extensive work on the existence of irreducible polynomials (or even primitive ones) over finite fields with certain coefficients prescribed. Here the topic is extended to irreducible self-reciprocal polynomials. Let \(q\) be a power of an odd prime. An irreducible, self-reciprocal polynomial \(Q\) over the finite field \(\mathbb F_q\) must have even degree, so write \(Q=\sum_{i=0}^{2n} Q_ix^i\). The authors prove that for \(n\geq 2\), \(1\leq k\leq n\) and \(a\in\mathbb F_q\), there exists a monic, irreducible self-reciprocal polynomial \(Q\) of degree \(2n\) with \(Q_k=a\) if NEWLINE\[NEWLINE q^{\frac{n-k-1}{2}}\geq \frac{16}{5}k(k+5)+\frac{1}{2}. NEWLINE\]NEWLINE The proof uses Weil's bound for character sums as well as a bound on a different character sum due to the first author.
0 references