Guest rainpurple Posted January 11, 2005 Posted January 11, 2005 Question: Let F be a finite field of odd characteristic. Prove that the rings F[X]/(X^2 - a) as a ranges over all nonzero elements of F fall into exactly two isomorphism classes. I am thinking to classify into two cases: a is a perfect square in F and a is not a perfect square. But I don't know what the condition "the character is odd (shou be odd prime?!)" will do here. Thx a lot! Rp~
matt grime Posted January 11, 2005 Posted January 11, 2005 The characteristic is always a prime (if it's non-zero), you don't need to state that, so they don't. You need odd characteristic because squaring in charactersitc two does odd things.: (X+r)^"=X^2+r^2
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