Math 124 Problem Set 4
1.
1;
1;
1;
1;
2. By quadratic reciprocity
. There are four cases:
Case 1:
,
:
Then 1 and
1.
Case 2:
,
: Then 7 and
-1.
Case 3:
,
: Then 5 and
-1.
Case 4:
,
: Then 11 and
1.
(We solve the systems with the Chinese
Remainder Theorem).
3. It is sufficient to give two distinct elements
in of order 2, for if there was a primitive root ,
then
cannot simultaneously be
congruent to and modulo .
Put ; since
, has order 2 in . Set
; then
4. Let be a primitive root modulo . We will construct an element of with order . Let for some to be determined. Then by the binomial theorem
5. Let be a primitive root modulo . Since , has order 3. Therefore is a solution to modulo p. Since and we are in a domain, . Now note that ; therefore , so .
6. The proof is almost identical to the one above. Let in be an element of order 5. Then and implies that . Now
7. All odd primes. Let be an odd prime and a primitive root modulo . Rewrite the sum as:
8. A good guess seems to be
. In
PARI, we can write a program to check the first primes to see
if 2 is a primitive root, and divide this total by to see the
behavior of the ratio:
g0(n)=numRoot=0;
lPr=prime(2);
for(j=2,n,(if(znorder(Mod(2,lPr))==lPr-1,numRoot++)); lPr=prime(j+1)); tPr=n;
return(numRoot/(1.0*n));
Using this, we have
. This exhausts PARI's list of
primes, so we can write another program to continue testing:
g(n)=lPr=nextprime(lPr+1);
for(j=1,n,(if(znorder(Mod(2,lPr))==lPr-1,numRoot++));tPr++;lPr=nextprime(lPr+1));
return(numRoot/(1.0*tPr));
With this program, we
can check the first primes (according to PARI's nextprime
function). For the first 81,560 primes, we have
; For the first 101,560 primes, we have
. Finally, for the first 200,000 primes,
we have
.