Cohn's theorem

In mathematics, Cohn's theorem states that a nth-degree self-inversive polynomial has as many roots in the open unit disk as the reciprocal polynomial of its derivative. Cohn's theorem is useful for studying the distribution of the roots of self-inversive and self-reciprocal polynomials in the complex plane.

An nth-degree polynomial,

is called self-inversive if there exists a fixed complex number ( ) of modulus 1 so that,

where

is the reciprocal polynomial associated with and the bar means complex conjugation. Self-inversive polynomials have many interesting properties. For instance, its roots are all symmetric with respect to the unit circle and a polynomial whose roots are all on the unit circle is necessarily self-inversive. The coefficients of self-inversive polynomials satisfy the relations.

In the case where a self-inversive polynomial becomes a complex-reciprocal polynomial (also known as a self-conjugate polynomial). If its coefficients are real then it becomes a real self-reciprocal polynomial.

The formal derivative of is a (n − 1)th-degree polynomial given by

Therefore, Cohn's theorem states that both and the polynomial

have the same number of roots in

See also

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Cohn's theorem, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.