[PDF][PDF] Manifolds of difference polynomials

RM Cohn�- Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 1948 - ams.org
RM Cohn
Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 1948ams.org
1. It is the purpose of this paper to develop in some detail the structure of the manifolds
determined by systems of difference polynomials. Our results will necessarily be confined to
the case of polynomials in an abstract field, since a suitable existence theorem for analytic
difference equations is not available. The ideal theory, developed by JF Ritt and HW
Raudenbush (1) for abstract systems of difference polynomials, is therefore fundamental in
our work. 2. In Part I of our paper we describe a theoretical method for elimination of�…
1. It is the purpose of this paper to develop in some detail the structure of the manifolds determined by systems of difference polynomials. Our results will necessarily be confined to the case of polynomials in an abstract field, since a suitable existence theorem for analytic difference equations is not available. The ideal theory, developed by JF Ritt and HW Raudenbush (1) for abstract systems of difference polynomials, is therefore fundamental in our work.
2. In Part I of our paper we describe a theoretical method for elimination of unknowns in systems of algebraic difference equations. We employ this method to prove analogues for difference fields of fundamental theorems of algebra on field extensions. With the aid of these results we show in Theorem III that the number of arbitrary (2) unknowns in a prime difference ideal is constant for all possible choices of sets of arbitrary unknowns. 3. Part II is concerned with the manifold of a single algebraically irreducible difference polynomial in an abstract field. A factorization process for polynomials in analytic fields was developed by JF Ritt (3) in determinining the maximum number of irreducible manifolds, not held by polynomials of zero order, in the decomposition of the manifold of a first order difference polynomial. In Theorem IV we show that, when the Ritt factorization process is applied to a polynomial A in an abstract field, each of the polynomial sequences it produces actually determines a prime ideal held by A but not by any polynomial of lower order than A. Furthermore, all such prime ideals are obtained in this way. This constitutes a form of existence theorem for difference polynomials in abstract fields, and is fundamental in the further development of the theory.
ams.org
Showing the best result for this search. See all results