A function h F F is said to be determined by a polynomial i
A function h : F F is said to be determined by a polynomial if there is some polynomial a(x) F[x] such that h(c) = a(c) for all c in F. Prove that if F is a finite field with n elements, then every function h : F F is determined by a polynomial of degree at most n
Solution
Let f(X) be any nonzero polynomial over F of degree n  1 or less. Then since
 m(X) is irreducible and degf < degm, f(X) and m(X) are relatively prime, and there
 are polynomials a(X) and b(X) over F such that a(X)f(X) + b(X)m(X) = 1. But
 then a()f() = 1, so that any nonzero element of Fn1[] has a multiplicative inverse.
 It follows that Fn1[] is a field. (This may not be obvious, since the product of two
polynomials of degree n1 or less can have degree greater than n1, but if degg > n1,
 then divide g by m to get g(X) = q(X)m(X) + r(X) where deg r(X) < degm(X) = n.
 Replace X by  to get g() = r()  Fn1[]. Less abstractly, if m() = 3 ++1 = 0,
 then 3 =   1, 4 = 2  , and so on.)
 Now any field containing F and  must contain all polynomials in , in particular
 all polynomials of degree at most n  1. Therefore Fn1[]  F[]  F(). But F()
 is the smallest field containing F and , so F()  Fn1[], and we conclude that
 F() = F[] = Fn1[]. Finally, the elements 1, , . . . , n1 certainly span Fn1[], and
 they are linearly independent because if a nontrivial linear combination of these elements
 were zero, we would have a nonzero polynomial of degree less than that of m(X) with 
 as a root, contradicting (2) previous theorem
 We now prove a basic multiplicativity result for extensions, after a preliminary discussion.
 
 Suppose that F  K  E, the elements i, i  I, form a basis for E over K, and the
 elements j, j  J, form a basis for K over F. (I and J need not be finite.) Then the
 products ij, i  I, j  J, form a basis for E over F.
 Proof. If   E, then  is a linear combination of the i with coefficients ai  K, and
 each ai is a linear combination of the j with coefficients bij  F. It follows that the ij
 span E over F. Now if i,j ijij = 0, then i iji = 0 for all j, and consequently
 ij = 0 for all i, j, and the ij are linearly independent. 
 3.1.9 The Degree is Multiplicative
 If F  K  E, then [E : F] = [E : K][K : F]. In particular, [E : F] is finite if and only if
 [E : K] and [K : F] are both finite.
 , we have [E : K] = |I|, [K : F] = |J|, and [E : F] = |I||J|.
 We close this section by proving that every finite extension is algebraic.
 If E is a finite extension of F, then E is an algebraic extension of F
![A function h : F F is said to be determined by a polynomial if there is some polynomial a(x) F[x] such that h(c) = a(c) for all c in F. Prove that if F is a fin A function h : F F is said to be determined by a polynomial if there is some polynomial a(x) F[x] such that h(c) = a(c) for all c in F. Prove that if F is a fin](/WebImages/23/a-function-h-f-f-is-said-to-be-determined-by-a-polynomial-i-1055189-1761550407-0.webp)
