pith. sign in

arxiv: 1902.07785 · v1 · pith:EFLVDDOCnew · submitted 2019-02-20 · 💻 cs.SC · cs.CC· cs.DS· math.NT

Counting basic-irreducible factors mod p^k in deterministic poly-time and p-adic applications

classification 💻 cs.SC cs.CCcs.DSmath.NT
keywords bmodfactorsbasic-irreducibleirreduciblealgorithmdeterministicnumbercount
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

Finding an irreducible factor, of a polynomial $f(x)$ modulo a prime $p$, is not known to be in deterministic polynomial time. Though there is such a classical algorithm that {\em counts} the number of irreducible factors of $f\bmod p$. We can ask the same question modulo prime-powers $p^k$. The irreducible factors of $f\bmod p^k$ blow up exponentially in number; making it hard to describe them. Can we count those irreducible factors $\bmod~p^k$ that remain irreducible mod $p$? These are called {\em basic-irreducible}. A simple example is in $f=x^2+px \bmod p^2$; it has $p$ many basic-irreducible factors. Also note that, $x^2+p \bmod p^2$ is irreducible but not basic-irreducible! We give an algorithm to count the number of basic-irreducible factors of $f\bmod p^k$ in deterministic poly(deg$(f),k\log p$)-time. This solves the open questions posed in (Cheng et al, ANTS'18 \& Kopp et al, Math.Comp.'19). In particular, we are counting roots $\bmod\ p^k$; which gives the first deterministic poly-time algorithm to compute Igusa zeta function of $f$. Also, our algorithm efficiently partitions the set of all basic-irreducible factors (possibly exponential) into merely deg$(f)$-many disjoint sets, using a compact tree data structure and {\em split} ideals.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.