Degree 5 polynomials and Descartes' rule of signs
Acta Univ. M. Belii Ser. Math. 28 (2020), 3-21 For a univariate real polynomial without zero coefficients, Descartes' rule of signs (completed by an observation of Fourier) says that its numbers $pos$ of positive and $neg$ of negative roots (counted with multiplicity) are majorized respectively...
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Zusammenfassung: | Acta Univ. M. Belii Ser. Math. 28 (2020), 3-21 For a univariate real polynomial without zero coefficients, Descartes' rule
of signs (completed by an observation of Fourier) says that its numbers $pos$
of positive and $neg$ of negative roots (counted with multiplicity) are
majorized respectively by the numbers $c$ and $p$ of sign changes and sign
preservartions in the sequence of its coefficients, and that the differences
$c-pos$ and $p-neg$ are even numbers. For degree 5 polynomials, it has been
proved by A.~Albouy and Y.~Fu that there exist no such polynomials having three
distinct positive and no negative roots and whose signs of the coefficients are
$(+,+,-,+,-,-)$ (or having three distinct negative and no positive roots and
whose signs of the coefficients are $(+,-,-,-,-,+)$). For degree 5 and when the
leading coefficient is positive, these are all cases of numbers of positive and
negative roots (all distinct) and signs of the coefficients which are
compatible with Descartes' rule of signs, but for which there exist no such
polynomials. We explain this non-existence and the existence in all other cases
with $d=5$ by means of pictures showing the discriminant set of the family of
polynomials $x^5+x^4+ax^3+bx^2+cx+d$ together with the coordinate axes. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2005.02064 |