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Hensel's Lemma


An important result in valuation theory which gives information on finding roots of polynomials. Hensel's lemma is formally stated as follows. Let (K,|·|) be a complete non-Archimedean field, and let R be the corresponding valuation ring. Let f(x) be a polynomial whose coefficients are in R and suppose a_0 satisfies

 |f(a_0)|<|f^'(a_0)|^2,
(1)

where f^' is the (formal) derivative of f. Then there exists a unique element a in R such that f(a)=0 and

 |a-a_0|<=|(f(a_0))/(f^'(a_0))|.
(2)

Less formally, if f(x) is a polynomial with "integer" coefficients and f(a_0) is "small" compared to f^'(a_0), then the equation f(x)=0 has a solution "near" a_0. In addition, there are no other solutions near a_0, although there may be other solutions. The proof of the lemma is based around the Newton-Raphson method and relies on the non-Archimedean nature of the valuation.

Consider the following example in which Hensel's lemma is used to determine that the equation x^2=-1 is solvable in the 5-adic numbers Q_5 (and so we can embed the Gaussian integers inside Q_5 in a nice way). Let K be the 5-adic numbers Q_5, let f(x)=x^2+1, and let a_0=2. Then we have f(2)=5 and f^'(2)=4, so

 |f(2)|_5=1/5<|f^'(2)|_5^2=1,
(3)

and the condition is satisfied. Hensel's lemma then tells us that there is a 5-adic number a such that a^2+1=0 and

 |a-2|_5<=|5/4|_5=1/5.
(4)

Similarly, there is a 5-adic number b such that b^2+1=0 and

 |b-3|_5<=|(10)/6|_5=1/5.
(5)

Therefore, we have found both the square roots of -1 in Q_5. It is possible to find the roots of any polynomial using this technique.


See also

p-adic Number, Valuation Theory

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References

Chevalley, C. C. "Hensel's Lemma." §3.2 in Introduction to the Theory of Algebraic Functions of One Variable. Providence, RI: Amer. Math. Soc., pp. 43-44, 1951.Getz, J. "On Congruence Properties of the Partition Function." Internat. J. Math. Math. Sci. 23, 493-496, 2000.Koch, H. Number Theory: Algebraic Numbers and Functions. Providence, RI: Amer. Math. Soc., pp. 115-117, 2000.Niven, I. M.; Zuckerman, H. S.; and Montgomery, H. L. An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers, 5th ed. New York: Wiley, 1991.

Referenced on Wolfram|Alpha

Hensel's Lemma

Cite this as:

Weisstein, Eric W. "Hensel's Lemma." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource. https://mathworld.wolfram.com/HenselsLemma.html

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