Jump to content

Weierstrass Nullstellensatz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mathematics, the Weierstrass Nullstellensatz is a version of the intermediate value theorem over a real closed field. It says:[1][2]

Given a polynomial in one variable with coefficients in a real closed field F and in , if , then there exists a in such that and .

Proof

[edit]

Since F is real-closed, F(i) is algebraically closed, hence f(x) can be written as , where is the leading coefficient and are the roots of f. Since each nonreal root can be paired with its conjugate (which is also a root of f), we see that f can be factored in F[x] as a product of linear polynomials and polynomials of the form , .

If f changes sign between a and b, one of these factors must change sign. But is strictly positive for all x in any formally real field, hence one of the linear factors , , must change sign between a and b; i.e., the root of f satisfies .

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Swan, Theorem 10.4.
  2. ^ Srivastava 2013, Proposition 5.9.11.
  • R. G. Swan, Tarski's Principle and the Elimination of Quantifiers at Richard G. Swan
  • Srivastava, Shashi Mohan (2013). A Course on Mathematical Logic.