An important result in Valuation Theory which gives information on finding roots of Polynomials.
Hensel's lemma is formally stated as follow. Let
be a complete non-Archimedean valuated field, and let
be
the corresponding Valuation Ring. Let
be a Polynomial whose Coefficients are in
and suppose
satisfies
 |
(1) |
where
is the (formal) Derivative of
. Then there exists a unique element
such that
and
 |
(2) |
Less formally, if
is a Polynomial with ``Integer'' Coefficients and
is
``small'' compared to
, then the equation
has a solution ``near''
. In addition, there are no other
solutions near
, although there may be other solutions. The proof of the Lemma is based around the Newton-Raphson
method and relies on the non-Archimedean nature of the valuation.
Consider the following example in which Hensel's lemma is used to determine that the equation
is solvable in
the 5-adic numbers
(and so we can embed the Gaussian Integers inside
in a nice way). Let
be the 5-adic numbers
, let
, and let
. Then we have
and
, so
 |
(3) |
and the condition is satisfied. Hensel's lemma then tells us that there is a
5-adic number
such that
and
 |
(4) |
Similarly, there is a 5-adic number
such that
and
 |
(5) |
Therefore, we have found both the square roots of
in
. It is possible to find the roots of any
Polynomial using this technique.
© 1996-9 Eric W. Weisstein
1999-05-25