Product Design, Manufacturing & Innovation Resources
Home » Factorization of Real Polynomials

Factorization of Real Polynomials

1800
Mathematician working on factorization of real polynomials in a historical classroom.

(generated image for illustration only)

A direct corollary of the fundamental theorem of algebra is that any non-constant polynomial with real coefficients can be factored into a product of linear factors and irreducible quadratic factors, all with real coefficients. The linear factors correspond to the real roots, while the irreducible quadratic factors correspond to pairs of complex conjugate roots \(a \pm bi\).

This corollary bridges the gap between the abstract world of complex roots and the practical applications involving real numbers. The fundamental theorem guarantees that a real polynomial \(p(x)\) of degree \(n\) has \(n\) complex roots. A key additional property is that if a polynomial has only real coefficients, its non-real roots must come in conjugate pairs. That is, if \(z = a + bi\) is a root, then its conjugate \(\bar{z} = a – bi\) must also be a root. This can be shown by observing that \(p(\bar{z}) = \overline{p(z)}\) for a real polynomial; if \(p(z)=0\), then \(\overline{p(z)}=0\), so \(p(\bar{z})=0\).

Each pair of conjugate roots \((z, \bar{z})\) can be combined to form a real quadratic factor: \((x – z)(x – \bar{z}) = (x – (a+bi))(x – (a-bi)) = x^2 – 2ax + (a^2+b^2)\). This quadratic has real coefficients and is irreducible over the real numbers because its discriminant is negative (\((-2a)^2 – 4(a^2+b^2) = -4b^2 < 0\) for \(b \neq 0\)). By grouping all real roots into linear factors \((x-r)\) and all conjugate pairs into irreducible quadratic factors, any real polynomial can be fully factored using only real coefficients. This result is immensely practical, especially in integral calculus for the decomposition of rational functions.

UNESCO Nomenclature: 1101
– Algebra

Type

Abstract System

Disruption

Substantial

Usage

Widespread Use

Precursors

  • the fundamental theorem of algebra
  • the complex conjugate root theorem
  • Viète’s formulas relating roots and coefficients
  • methods for polynomial division

Applications

  • calculus (partial fraction decomposition for integrating rational functions)
  • differential equations (finding solutions to linear homogeneous equations with constant coefficients)
  • control theory (analyzing system poles and zeros)
  • signal processing (designing filters)

Patents:

NA

Potential Innovations Ideas

Due to scrapping bot traffic, currently more than 40k per day, this content is reserved to community members.
> Login < or > Register < (100% free) to access this, so as all other restricted content and tools.

Related to: real polynomial, factorization, complex conjugate roots, irreducible quadratic, partial fractions, calculus, linear factors, real coefficients, corollary, differential equations.

Historical Context

Factorization of Real Polynomials

-550
1750
1790
1800
1844
1874
1893
-450
1585
1779
1799
1801
1850
1875
1897

(if date is unknown or not relevant, e.g. "fluid mechanics", a rounded estimation of its notable emergence is provided)

Related Invention, Innovation & Technical Principles

Full size images and downloads are only available, 100% free, for registered members.

> Login <