Except as noted, it will be assumed that polynomials have real numbers as coefficients, rather than any complex numbers. Some of these properties will be useful for the Exercises; others are listed for the sake of completeness.
(The reason: You can always do a long division of
by
to get a quotient
and a
remainder
, which being of lower degree than
is simply a constant
. Thus
. Put
; since
you
get
, so
. In other words,
, so
is a factor of
.)
(The reason: Not more than different terms
could be factors of
, since
is of degree
. Actually, this reason
requires further explanation: When you have factored out
some of the terms
for roots
of
and you have an equation
, you need to observe that the
remaining roots of
are also roots of
,
so you can keep factoring.)
(In other words, in talking about ``equal polynomials'' we don't have to say whether we mean equal as functions or equal as polynomial expressions. By way of contrast, in modern algebra ones studies polynomials with coefficients in finite fields; in this setting two polynomials with different coefficients can give the same function.)
(The reason: The values of at which
and
agree are roots of the difference
. If this difference is nonzero it can have at most
roots.)
(For example, if
for
, then
for all values of
.)
(This is just a nonparametric version of Theorem .
The uniqueness comes from the agreement property above.)
(The reason: If
, with
, for large values of
the leading term
overwhelms the other terms
and makes the value of
large. More formally, if
for all
with
, consider values of
with
and divide through by
to get
. Then let
. You get
, a contradiction.)
(The reason: Suppose the polynomial is
and its leading coefficient is positive. For a large
negative value of
,
; for a large
positive value of
,
. By continuity,
in between somewhere there is a
with
.
If the leading coefficient is negative, similar reasoning
applies.)
This is one statement of the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra. The following fact is another, equivalent statement:
Thus if there is one factor
,
then there must be one factor
.