Harman Patil (Editor)

Central polynomial

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit

In algebra, a central polynomial for n-by-n matrices is a polynomial in non-commuting variables that is non-constant but yields a scalar matrix whenever it is evaluated at n-by-n matrices. That such polynomials exist for any square matrices was discovered in 1970 independently by Formanek and Razmyslov. The term "central" is because the evaluation of a central polynomial has the image lying in the center of the matrix ring over any commutative ring. The notion has an application to the theory of polynomial identity rings.

Example: ( x y y x ) 2 is a central polynomial for 2-by-2-matrices. Indeed, by the Cayley–Hamilton theorem, one has that ( x y y x ) 2 = det ( x y y x ) I for any 2-by-2-matrices x, y.

References

Central polynomial Wikipedia