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Property / cites work: Primitive Roots in a Finite Field / rank
 
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Property / cites work: THE PRIMITIVE NORMAL BASIS THEOREM – WITHOUT A COMPUTER / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Bases for Finite Fields / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Q4714153 / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Primitive Normal Bases for Finite Fields / rank
 
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Latest revision as of 22:09, 9 December 2024

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A generalization of the primitive normal basis theorem
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    A generalization of the primitive normal basis theorem (English)
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    19 November 2010
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    Let \(A=\mathbb F_q[T]\) and fix irreducible \(f\in A\) of degree \(d\). Set \(E_m=\mathbb F_{q^{dm}}\). One can define an \(A\)-module structure on \(E_m\) resulting in the Carlitz module \(C(E_m)\). \(C(E_m)\) is isomorphic, as an \(A\)-module, to \(A/(f^m-1)\) and so is cyclic. A primitive generator for \(C(E_m)\) is a primitive element \(\alpha\in E_m\) that generates \(C(E_m)\). The authors prove that \(C(E_m)\) has a primitive generator except possibly for finitely many \((q, d, m)\), which are given explicitly. They note there is no primitive generator for \((q,d,m)=(2,2,1)\). When \(f=T\), a primitive generator of \(C(E_m)\) yields a primitive normal basis for \(E_m\) over \(E_1\). Lenstra and Schoof have shown that primitive normal bases exist in all cases.
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    character sum
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    primitive root
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    Carlitz module
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