Maple Professional
Maple Academic
Maple Student Edition
Maple Personal Edition
Maple Player
Maple Player for iPad
MapleSim Professional
MapleSim Academic
Maple T.A. - Testing & Assessment
Maple T.A. MAA Placement Test Suite
Möbius - Online Courseware
Machine Design / Industrial Automation
Aerospace
Vehicle Engineering
Robotics
Power Industries
System Simulation and Analysis
Model development for HIL
Plant Modeling for Control Design
Robotics/Motion Control/Mechatronics
Other Application Areas
Mathematics Education
Engineering Education
High Schools & Two-Year Colleges
Testing & Assessment
Students
Financial Modeling
Operations Research
High Performance Computing
Physics
Live Webinars
Recorded Webinars
Upcoming Events
MaplePrimes
Maplesoft Blog
Maplesoft Membership
Maple Ambassador Program
MapleCloud
Technical Whitepapers
E-Mail Newsletters
Maple Books
Math Matters
Application Center
MapleSim Model Gallery
User Case Studies
Exploring Engineering Fundamentals
Teaching Concepts with Maple
Maplesoft Welcome Center
Teacher Resource Center
Student Help Center
Irreduc - inert irreducibility function
Calling Sequence
Irreduc(a)
Irreduc(a, K)
Parameters
a
-
multivariate polynomial
K
RootOf
Description
The Irreduc function is a placeholder for testing the irreducibility of the multivariate polynomial a. It is used in conjunction with mod and modp1.
Formally, an element a of a commutative ring R is said to be "irreducible" if it is not zero, not a unit, and implies either b or c is a unit.
In this context where R is the ring of polynomials over the integers mod p, which is a finite field, the units are the non-zero constant polynomials. Hence all constant polynomials are not irreducible by this definition.
The call Irreduc(a) mod p returns true iff a is "irreducible" modulo p. The polynomial a must have rational coefficients or coefficients from a finite field specified by RootOf expressions.
The call Irreduc(a, K) mod p returns true iff a is "irreducible" modulo p over the finite field defined by K, an algebraic extension of the integers mod p where K is a RootOf.
The call modp1(Irreduc(a), p) returns true iff a is "irreducible" modulo p. The polynomial a must be in the modp1 representation.
Examples
See Also
AIrreduc, Factor, irreduc, isprime, mod, modp1, RootOf
Download Help Document