Primitive polynomial (field theory)

In field theory, a branch of mathematics, a primitive polynomial is the minimal polynomial of a primitive element of the finite extension field GF(pm). In other words, a polynomial F(X) with coefficients in GF(p) = Z/pZ is a primitive polynomial if its degree is m and it has a root \alpha in GF(pm) such that \{0,1, \alpha, \alpha^2, \alpha^3,\dots,\alpha^{p^{m}-2}\} is the entire field GF(pm). This means also that \alpha is a primitive (pm − 1)-root of unity in GF(pm).

Properties

Because all minimal polynomials are irreducible, all primitive polynomials are also irreducible.

A primitive polynomial must have a non-zero constant term, for otherwise it will be divisible by x. Over GF(2), x + 1 is a primitive polynomial and all other primitive polynomials have an odd number of terms, since any polynomial mod 2 with an even number of terms is divisible by x + 1 (it has 1 as a root).

An irreducible polynomial F(x) of degree m over GF(p), where p is prime, is a primitive polynomial if the smallest positive integer n such that F(x) divides xn − 1 is n = pm − 1.

Over GF(pm) there are exactly φ(pm − 1)/m primitive polynomials of degree m, where φ is Euler's totient function.

A primitive polynomial of degree m has m different roots in GF(pm), which all have order pm − 1. This means that, if \alpha is such a root, then  \alpha^{p^m-1}=1 and  \alpha^i\ne 1 for 0 < i < pm − 1.

Usage

Field element representation

Primitive polynomials are used in the representation of elements of a finite field. If α in GF(pm) is a root of a primitive polynomial F(x) then since the order of α is pm − 1 that means that all elements of GF(pm) can be represented as successive powers of α:


GF(p^m) = \{ 0, 1, \alpha, \alpha^2, \ldots, \alpha^{p^m-2} \} .

When these elements are reduced modulo F(x), they provide the polynomial basis representation of all the elements of the field.

Since the multiplicative group of a finite field is always a cyclic group, a primitive polynomial f is a polynomial such that x is a generator of the multiplicative group in GF(p)[x]/f(x)

Pseudo-random bit generation

Primitive polynomials over GF(2), the field with two elements, can be used for pseudorandom bit generation. In fact, every linear feedback shift register with maximum cycle length (which is 2n − 1, where n is the length of the linear feedback shift register) may be built from a primitive polynomial.

For example, given the primitive polynomial x10 + x3 + 1, we start with a user-specified 10-bit seed occupying bit positions 1 through 10, starting from the least significant bit. (The seed need not randomly be chosen, but it can be). We then take the 10th and 3rd bits, and create a new 0th bit, so that the xor of the three bits is 0. The seed is then shifted left one position so that the 0th bit moves to position 1. This process can be repeated to generate 210 − 1 = 1023 pseudo-random bits.

In general, for a primitive polynomial of degree m over GF(2), this process will generate 2m − 1 pseudo-random bits before repeating the same sequence.

CRC codes

The cyclic redundancy check (CRC) is an error-detection code that operates by interpreting the message bitstring as the coefficients of a polynomial over GF(2) and dividing it by a fixed generator polynomial also over GF(2); see Mathematics of CRC. Primitive polynomials, or multiples of them, are a good choice for generator polynomials because they can reliably detect two bit errors that occur far apart in the message bitstring, up to a distance of 2n − 1 for a degree n primitive polynomial.

Primitive trinomials

A useful class of primitive polynomials is the primitive trinomials, those having only three nonzero terms, because they are the simplest and result in the most efficient pseudo-random number generators. A number of results give techniques for locating and testing primitiveness of trinomials.

For trinomials over GF(2), there is a simple test: for every r such that 2r − 1 is a Mersenne prime, a trinomial of degree r is primitive if and only if it is irreducible. Recent algorithms invented by Richard Brent have enabled the discovery of primitive trinomials over GF(2) of very large degree, such as x6972593 + x3037958 + 1. This can be used to create a pseudo-random number generator of the huge period 26972593 − 1, or roughly 102098959.[1]

References

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