Questions tagged [finite-fields]

Finite fields are fields (number systems with addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division) with only finitely many elements. They arise in abstract algebra, number theory, and cryptography. The order of a finite field is always a prime power, and for each prime power $q$ there is a single isomorphism type. It is usually denoted by $\mathbb{F}_q$ or $\operatorname{GF}(q)$.

The order of a finite field is always a prime power, and for each prime power $q = p^r$ with $p$ prime there is a single isomorphism type. It is usually denoted by $\mathbb{F}_q$ or $\operatorname{GF}(q)$. The finite field $\mathbb F_q$ has characteristic $p$.

In the case $r = 1$ (i.e. $q = p$), a representative of $\mathbb F_p$ is given by the ring $\mathbb{Z}/p\mathbb{Z}$ of integers residue classes modulo $p$. For $r \geq 2$, $\mathbb F_q$ can be constructed by a quotient ring $\mathbb{F}_p[x]/\langle f(x)\rangle$, where $f\in\mathbb F_p[x]$ is an irreducible polynomial of degree $r$.


Questions about finite fields typically fall into one of the following groups:

1: Questions arising in introductory level courses on abstract algebra. Here abstract-algebra is a suitable related tag.

2: Questions about solvability of higher degree congruences and/or factorization of polynomials with integer coefficients modulo a prime number often need basic facts about finite fields. This kind of questions are adequately tagged with polynomials and/or elementary-number-theory. Adding a finite-fields tag may help, but may not be necessary to attract quality answers.

3: Finite fields naturally occur in algebraic-number-theory as their properties are used heavily in the study of prime ideals and their behavior under field extensions. Use the tags jointly, if you see the need for it. A rich area in the intersection of finite fields and number theory is that of characters, most notably character sums. For the latter exponential-sums is an appropriate auxiliary tag.

4: Many error-correcting codes use a finite-field as the alphabet representing data, and such codes depend heavily on the properties of the alphabet fields. Use the coding-theory tag in conjunction with finite-fields, if your question is under this umbrella. Another rich source of applications of finite fields is cryptography.

5: There are special questions considering algebraic varieties and/or algebraic groups over finite fields. Here my recommendation is to use algebraic-geometry or algebraic-groups as the primary tag, and finite-fields as an auxiliary tag. This way your question will most likely attract the attention of those members who are best placed to answer it.


WARNING1: A relatively common mistake is to assume that finite-fields is an appropriate tag for questions about finite field extensions. There the word 'finite' is an attribute of the word 'extension' meaning that the dimension of the larger field as a vector space over the smaller one is finite. If that is what your question is about, you should use some combination of the tags galois-theory, field-theory, extension-field.


WARNING2: Another common source of confusion is the following. It is a well-known fact that a finite subgroup of the multiplicative group of any field is cyclic. Thus the entire multiplicative group of a finite field is cyclic. Any generator $g\in\Bbb{F}_q^*$ of the multiplicative group is called a primitive element. This is a natural extension of the concept of a primitive root in the multiplicative group $\Bbb{Z}/p\Bbb{Z}^*$ of the residue class ring. Unfortunately it is in conflict with the common practice of general field theory to call an element $z\in L$ primitive (w.r.t. the field extension $K/L$), if $L=K(z)$. In the case of finite fields we require more from a primitive element.

An irreducible polynomial $m(x)\in\Bbb{F}_p$ of degree $r$, is called a primitive polynomial, if any (and hence all) of its zeros in $\Bbb{F}_q$ are primitive elements. IOW, primitive polynomials are exactly the minimal polynomials (over the prime field) of primitive elements. This is another unfortunate source of confusion, for in the theory of polynomials over PIDs a polynomial is called primitive, if its coefficients have no non-unital common divisors. This is rarely very confusing for over a field this alternative concept of primitivity is patently meaningless.

Primitive polynomials are extremely useful in software implementations of the arithmetic of a moderate size finite field. This is largely because having a primitive polynomial at hand allows one to generate look-up-tables for both the base $g$ discrete logarithm as well as its inverse function. See this CW question for examples.

For that reason extensive tables of primitive polynomials have been generated. One such table is here.


Learn more: The tome for the keen students of finite fields is the book by Rudolf Lidl and Harald Niederreiter.

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Can we calculate $a^{n i} \mod p$?

If we have a natural $n$ (not $0$), and a prime $p$, is it possible to calculate $$a^{n i} \mod p$$ where $i$ is the imaginary number $\sqrt{-1}$? SOME THOUGHTS Knowing that $a^{i \cdot i} = a^{-1}$ may help. Also, modulo a prime $p$, we of course…
Matt Groff
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Finite Field Homomorphism

Let's say that I have a finite field K with characteristic 2. I define @ as a map where @ : K -> K, and x -> $x^2$. First of all, what are some examples of fields like K? I initially thought it would only be 0 and 1 with addition and…
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set of integer modulo m for composite values

Is there a Set of integer modulo m, Zm, where m is composite and the set is a field, (all of its elements having a multiplicative inverse) ? I have heard that the set of integer modulo 4 cannot be a field. Why is that?
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Prove that the image $\alpha$ of $X$ in $\left(\mathbb{F}_3[X]/(X^3-X^2+1)\right)^{\times}$ is a generator

I'm trying to do an exercise of my homework that sais I have to prove that the iamge of $X$ in $K^{\times}=\left(\mathbb{F}_3[X]/(X^3-X^2+1)\right)^{\times}$ is a generator. Acording to what I know, $K^{\times}$ have 26 elements. So, $\alpha^{26}$…
MaríaCC
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Minimum polynom of an element in $K=\mathbb{F}_5[x]/(x^2-2)$

I want to know how to calculate the minimum polynom of an element $\alpha$ in $K=\mathbb{F}_5[X]/(X^2-2)$ where $\alpha$ is the image on $K$ of $X+2$ I'm already verficated that $K$ is a field. As I know, the minimum polynom is $g$ with the smallest…
MaríaCC
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Cyclic Rotation over Finite Fields

Let $\mathbb{F}$ be a finite field with $q$ elements and $\mathbb{E}$ an extension field of degree $n$ of $\mathbb{F}$. How I will be able to demonstrate that $$\sum_{k=0}^{n-1}t_k\sum_{i=0}^{n-1}\sum_{j=0}^{n-1}(g_{ij})^{q^k}x^{q^{i+k}+q^{j+k}}=…
juaninf
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Difference between Galois and other automorphisms

With respect to the definition of Galois field, for $E$ an extension of $F$ ($E$ and $F$ are finite fields) $\mathrm{Gal}\,(E/F)$ is the set of automorphisms of $E$ which fix $F$ pointwise. So I think that we can distinguish between…
Nil
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Binomial Coefficient Finite Field

Let $\mathbb{F}$ be a finite field with $q$ elements and $\mathbb{E}$ an extension field of degree $n$ of $\mathbb{F}$. Let $S(x) \in \mathbb{E}[x]$. How I will be able to reduce a expression:…
juaninf
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question regarding resultant of 2 polynomials defined over finite field

I have been studying "Introduction to finite fields" by Lidl & Neiderreiter and came across the following statement concerning resultant $R(f,g)$ of 2 polynomials $f(x) = a_{0}x^{n} + a_{1}x^{n - 1} + \ldots + a_{n} \in K[x]$ and $g(x) = b_{0}x^{m}…
akhil
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Prove that $f(Y^q) \equiv f(gY) \bmod(Y^{q-1} -g)$

I'm trying to understand the following, which seems obvious in some papers that I've read, but I couldn't find a proper proof for it. Let $q$ be an arbitrary prime power, and let $g \in \mathbb{F}_q$ be a generator of the multiplicative group…
OriFrid
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How do finite field addition and multiplication interact?

The multiplicative group of $\mathbb{F}_{p^n}$ is the circle group $C _{p^n-1}$. So, each nonzero element corresponds to a rotation, and multiplication composes rotations. The field is also an extension field of $\mathbb{F}_{p}$, which is equivalent…
chbaker0
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How to find the redundant representation of Finite field in GF(2^8)

Iam interested to understand the concept of redundant representation in finite field GF(2^8). How to calculate the basis change matrix from redundant to polynomial/normal representation in $GF(2^8)$ for irreducible polynomial $x^8+x^4+x^3+x+1$ ? in…
hardyrama
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Arithmetic in the finite field $\mathbb{F}_{2^4}$

In this document: "The Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm (ECDSA)" - Don Johnson, Alfred Menezes, Scott Vanstone; in section 4.2 example 7 there is some finite field arithmetic: Given $\alpha \in \mathbb{F}_{2^4}$ the following is…
Stent
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Normal basis on tower | composite fields

I'm trying to help someone with normal basis tower fields, specifically for isomorphic mapping of $GF(2^8)$ to $GF(((2^2)^2)^2)$. Example…
rcgldr
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Why can't we represent finite field extensions as $F_{p^n}=\{0,1,2,3,...,p^n-1\}$ and work mod $p^n$

I know field extensions of a finite field $\mathbb{F}_p$ for $p$ prime are represented as a quotient group over irreducible polynomials. For example $\mathbb{F}_{2^2}\cong\mathbb{F}_2[x]/(x^2+x+1)=\{0,1,\alpha,\alpha+1\}$ where $\alpha$ is a root of…
Shean
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