ON ZERO DISTRIBUTIONS OF SOME SELF-RECIPROCAL POLYNOMIALS WITH REAL COEFFICIENTS
ON ZERO DISTRIBUTIONS OF SOME SELF-RECIPROCAL POLYNOMIALS WITH REAL COEFFICIENTS
한국수학교육학회지시리즈B:순수및응용수학 / Journal of the Korean Society of Mathematical Education Series B: The Pure and Applied Mathematics, (P)1226-0657; (E)2287-6081
2017, v.24 no.2, pp.69-77
https://doi.org/10.7468/jksmeb.2017.24.2.69
Han, Seungwoo
(Gyeonggi Science High School)
Kim, Seon-Hong
(Department of Mathematics, Sookmyung Women's University)
Park, Jeonghun
(Gyeonggi Science High School)
Han, Seungwoo,
Kim, Seon-Hong,
&
Park, Jeonghun.
(2017). ON ZERO DISTRIBUTIONS OF SOME SELF-RECIPROCAL POLYNOMIALS WITH REAL COEFFICIENTS. 한국수학교육학회지시리즈B:순수및응용수학, 24(2), 69-77, https://doi.org/10.7468/jksmeb.2017.24.2.69
Abstract
If q(z) is a polynomial of degree n with all zeros in the unit circle, then the self-reciprocal polynomial <TEX>$q(z)+x^nq(1/z)$</TEX> has all its zeros on the unit circle. One might naturally ask: where are the zeros of <TEX>$q(z)+x^nq(1/z)$</TEX> located if q(z) has different zero distribution from the unit circle? In this paper, we study this question when <TEX>$q(z)=(z-1)^{n-k}(z-1-c_1){\cdots}(z-1-c_k)+(z+1)^{n-k}(z+1+c_1){\cdots}(z+1+c_k)$</TEX>, where <TEX>$c_j$</TEX> > 0 for each j, and q(z) is a 'zeros dragged' polynomial from <TEX>$(z-1)^n+(z+1)^n$</TEX> whose all zeros lie on the imaginary axis.
- keywords
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polynomials,
self-recipocal polynomials,
zeros,
zero dragging