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public-notes/Rational Root Theorem.md
2025-12-25 21:13:43 -08:00

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#Math #Algebra

Proof

Let polynomial


P(x) = \sum _{i = 0}^n c_i x^i

where c_i \in \mathbb{Z} (all values of c are integers).

Now let P(\frac p q) = 0, where p and q are coprime integers (let a fraction \frac p q be in simplest form and be a root of P).


\sum _{i = 0}^n c_i (\frac p q)^i = 0

Multiplying by q^n:


\sum _{i = 0}^n c_i p^n q^{n - i} = 0

Now subtract c_0 q^n from both sides and factor p out to get:


p\sum _{i = 1}^n c_i p^{n - 1} q^{n - i} = -c_0 q^n

Now p must divide -c_0q^n. However, we know p cannot divide q^n (since \frac p q is in simplest form / p and q are coprime), so p must divide c_0.

Doing the same thing as above but with the a_n term and q:


q\sum _{i = 0}^{n - 1} c_i p^n q^{n - i - 1} = -c_n p^n

By the above logic, q must divide c_n.

Conclusion

For all rational roots in simplest form (\frac p q where p and q are coprime integers), p must be a factor of the last coefficient while q must be a factor of the first coefficient.

Notes

For the curious, coprime integers p and q mean that \gcd(p, q) = 1.

If future me or someone else is wondering about the excess definitions, this was made for a friend.