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Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Quiz 2 key

Page 2: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

The Euclidean Algorithm

(long division)

Page 3: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

First: The Division algorithm

If a and b are integers with b <> 0, then there are unique integers q and r so that a = q b + r and 0 <= r < |b|

Example 3745 = __q__ 45 + __r___

Long division:

Calculator:

Page 4: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Divisor, common divisor, greatest common divisor

b is a divisor of a if a = b*q for some integer q

b is common divisor of a and c if _____

b is the greatest common divisor of a and c if ____

Page 5: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Arayabhata-Euclid’s algorithm: How to find gcd(a,b), the greatest common divisor of a and b

based on a single observation: if a = b q + r, then

any divisor of a and b is also a divisor of r, and any divisor

of b and r is also a divisor of a, so gcd(a,b) = gcd(b,r)

Euclid algorithm: use the division algorithm repeatedly

To reduce the problem to one you can solve.

Example: gcd(55,35)

55 = 35*1 + 20 so gcd(55,35) = gcd(35,20)

35 = 20*1 + 15 so gcd(35,20) = gcd(20,15)

20 = 15*1 + 5 done gcd(55,35) = 5

Page 6: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

2 columns of the arayabhata table: the columns of quotients and remainders

Page 7: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Writing gcd(a,b) as a linear combination of a and b

gcd(55,35) = 5 = 55*x + 35*y : Solve for x and y.

Page 8: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

The 1st column of the arayabhata table

Page 9: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

An application

Problem: Given a 3 pint can, a 5 pint can, a large tank of water, and a large empty tank, how can we get exactly 1 pint of water into the empty tank?

Page 10: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

We will talk about this on WednesdayDivision algorithm for polynomials in x.

If a(x) and b(x) are polynomials in x then there are unique polynomials q(x) and r(x) so that a(x) = q(x)*b(x) + r(x) where

r(x) = 0 or deg(r(x)) < deg(b(x))

Example: x^4 = __q(x)___ (x^2 -1) + __r(x)___

Long division:

Page 11: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Divisor, common divisor, and gcd for polynomials in x

b(x) is a divisor of a(x) if ____

c(x) is a common divisor of a(x) and b(x) if ___

c(x) is a greatest common divisor

Page 12: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Recall 4th gradeIf A and B are integers (whole numbers) then we say that B divides A if there is an integer Q such that A = BQ

Examples:

• 2 divides 6 since there is an integer (3) such that 6 = 2*3

•1 divides any 291 since there is a number (291) such that 291 = 219*1

•If B is any number then B divides 0 since there is a number (0) such that 0 = B*0

•Another way to say that B divides A is to say that B is a factor of A

Page 13: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

More examples

• 3 does not divide 5 since there is no whole number Q such that 5 = 3*Q

• 9 does not divide 10 since there is no whole number Q such that 10 = 9*Q

Page 14: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Visualizing division

6

6 = 2*3

7

2 divides 6

7 = 2*3 + 1 2 does not divide 7

Page 15: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Division Algorithm

7 > 2

7 – 1*2 = 5 > 2

7 – 2 - 2 = 7 – 2*2 = 3 > 2

7 – 2 - 2 – 2 = 7 – 3*2 = 1 < 2

A and B are whole numbers and B is not 0. To determine if B divides A do the following:i. If A = 0 then B divides Aii. If 0 < A < B then B does not divide Aii. If B <= A then replace A by B – A and repeat i.

The process subtracts B from A as many times as it can. At some point A is reduced to 0 or B cannot be subtracted from what remains. The effect is to write A = BQ + R with R = 0 or 0 < R < BR is called the remainder when A is divided by B. Q is called the quotient.

(step 1)

(step2)

(step 3)

(step 4)

Page 16: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

“Long Division”

__3 _ 7 | 220 210 10

220 = 7*30 + 10 (does 30 subtractions)

10 > 7 so can subtract more

3 1 7 | 220 210 10 _7 3

220 - 7*30 = 1*7 + 3 0 < 3 < 7 process terminates

Quotient = 31 remainder = 3

220 = 7*31 + 3

Page 17: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Division Algorithm

If A and B are integers with B not zero then there are unique integers Q and R such that A = BQ + R with 0 <= R < |B|

Note this allows A and B to be negative 5 = (-2)(-2) + 1 0 < 1 <|-2|

-7 = (-2)(4) + 1 0 < 1<|-2|

Page 18: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Works Exactly the Same for Polynomials

• B(x) divides A(x) if there is a Q(x) so thatA(x) = B(x)*Q(x)

• Every polynomial divides 0 0 = B(x)*0

• Any non-zero number divides any polynomial (e.g. A(x) = 7*( A(x) )

• x – 1 divides since

1

7

x2

1 x2

1 ( )x 1 ( )x 1

Page 19: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Recall that if f(x) and g(x) are not 0 then

degree f(x)*g(x) = degree f(x) + degree g(x)

This says that if B(x) is a factor of A(x) thendegree B(x) degree A(x)

Example: x does not divide 1 since degree (x) = 1 which is strictly less than the degree of 1 (which is 0).

5 x3

3 x 1 does not divide x2

1

Page 20: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Division Algorithm for Polynomials

If A(x) and B(x) are polynomials with B not zero then there are unique polynomials Q(x) and R(x) such that A(x) = B(x)Q(x) + R(x) with R(x)=0 ordegree R(x) < degree B(x)

Note that R(x) = 0 is another way to say that B(x) divides A(x).

Page 21: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

The Long Division of Polynomials is a Way to calculate Q(x) and R(x)

Observations:

To calculate Q(x) and R(x) it suffices to find R(x) since we can divide A(x)- R(x) by B(x) to get R(x)

The uniqueness of the remainder says if in any way you arrange to write A(x) = B(x)K(x) + P(x) where P(x) is zero or of smaller degree than B(x) then it must be that P(x) is the R(x) you would get by long division.

For instance : so the remainder when is divided by x-1 will be x.

Also so which says that the remainder when is divided by x -1 is 1.

x2 x ( )x 1 x x

2

( )x 1 ( )1 x x2 x

31 x

3 ( )x 1 ( )1 x x2

1x

2

Page 22: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Algebra of Remainders(modular arithmetic)

Principle: When calculating the remainder when an algebraic expression of polynomials is divided by a polynomial B, one can replace any factor or summand by its remainder upon division by B.

The remainder upon dividing the sum of two polynomials by B is the same as the remainder if either (or both) terms is first replaced by its remainder (or any polynomial that has the same remainder).

The remainder upon dividing the product of two polynomials by B is the same as the remainder if either (or both) terms is first replaced by its remainder (or any polynomial that has the same remainder).

Page 23: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Calculate the remainder upon division of

by x2

x 1

First note that since the remainder of is x2 ( )x

2x 1 1 ( )1 x x

2 1 x

x4

3 x3

x 1

x4

3 x3

x 1 ( )x2

23 x x

2x 1

We can replace by its remainder 1-x x2

x4

3 x3

x 1 ( )1 x2

3 x ( )1 x x 1 = 1 2 x x2

3 x 3 x2

x 1

= 4 x 4 x2

Now we can replace again to get x2 8 x 4

Page 24: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

SimilarlyCalculate the remainder when is divided by x

4 x2

2 x 1

As with the previous example the remainder of is 2x+1

the remainder of is the same as the remainder of or

x2

x4 ( )2 x 1

2

4 x2

4 x 1 = 4 ( )2 x 1 4 x 1 12 x 5

This says for some polynomial Q(x)x4 ( ) x

22 x 1 ( )Q x 12 x 5

is a root of . What is

Replace x by in

1 2 x2

2 x 1 ( )1 24

x4 ( ) x

22 x 1 ( )Q x 12 x 51 2

Since it is a root of we have or x2

2 x 1 ( )1 24 12 ( )1 2 5 17 12 2

Page 25: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

The Greatest Common Divisor (GCD) (also called GCFactor)

• The GCD of two integers A1 and A2 is the largest integer that divides both.– Examples: gcd(n,1)=1 for any n– gcd(n,0) = |n| if n is not 0

• (gcd(0,0) does not exist

• GCD 12 and 20– Factors of 12 = {-12,-6,-4,-3,-2,-1,1,2,3,4,6,12}– Factors of 20 = {-20,-10,-5,-4,-2,-1,1,2, 4, 5,10,20}– Common factors = {-4, -2,-1,1,2,4}– Greatest common factor = 4

• Not a practical for large numbers

Page 26: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

• Factors of 5280

• Factors of 4680

GCD(5280,4680) = ?

1 2 3 4 5 6

8 10 11 12 15 16

20 22 24 30 32 33

40 44 48 55 60 66

80 88 96 110 120 132

160 165 176 220 240 264

330 352 440 480 528 660

880 1056 1320 1760 2640 5280

1 2 3 4 5 6

8 9 10 12 13 15

18 20 24 26 30 36

39 40 45 52 60 65

72 78 90 104 117 120

130 156 180 195 234 260

312 360 390 468 520 585

780 936 1170 1560 2340 4680

Page 27: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

• 146057167872 has 1056 positive factors• 5228296875 has 120 positive factors• There is no known way to find a single

factor (other than itself and 1) of a randomly chosen number in a “small” number of steps.

• We can find the GCD of pairs of HUGE numbers in a small number of steps.

Page 28: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Theorem: If A, B, d and n are numbers and d divides both A and B then it also divides both A and B+/-n*A

Proof: A = d*r B = d*s

n*A = d*(n*r)

B + n*A = d*s +/- d*(n*r) = d*(s +/- n*r)

Theorem: GCD(A,B) = GCD(A,B+/- n*A)

Page 29: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Using this over and over …GCD(146057167872, 5228296875) =

GCD(146057167872 – 27* 5228296875, 5228296875) =GCD(4893152247, 5228296875) =

GCD(5228296875- 1*4893152247, 4893152247) =GCD(335144628, 4893152247 ) =GCD(4893152247-14* 335144628,335144628 ) = GCD(201127455, 335144628) = GCD( 201127455, 335144628- 1*201127455 ) =GCD( 201127455, 134017173) =GCD( 201127455 – 1*134017173, 134017173) =GCD( 67110282, 134017173) =GCD( 67110282, 134017173 – 1* 67110282) =GCD(67110282,66906891)=GCD(67110282-328* 66906891,66906891)=GCD(203391, 66906891)=GCD(203391, 66906891-328*203391) =GCD(203391,194634) =GCD(203391-1*194634, 194634) = GCD(8748, 194634) =GCD(8748, 194634-22*8748) = GCD(8748,2187) = GCD(8748-4*2187, 2187) = GCD(2187,0)

So we calculated the GCD without factoring. It has to stop because each time we subtracted a multiple of the smaller from the larger so that the resulting number is even smaller. Process has to eventually get to 0.

Page 30: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Euclid AlgorithmTo find the gcd of numbers A1 and A2 with A1 > A2 >= 0

a. If A2 = 0 then gcd = A1

b. If A2 > 0 then A1 = A2 q2 + A3 with A2>A3 >=0

c. Replace A1 by A2, A2 by A3 and go to step a.

This is exactly what we did in the previous example.

Example: gcd(120,85)

120 = 85*1 + 35

85 = 35*2 + 15

35 = 15*2 + 5

15 = 5*3 + 0 gcd = 5 (gcd is the last non-zero remainder)

Page 31: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Tabulate: note pattern

120 = 85*1 + 35

120 " "

85 1

35 2

15 2

5 3

0 " "

85 = 35*2 + 15

35 = 15*2 + 5

15 = 5*3 + 0

Page 32: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Find numbers a, n so we can write GCD(120,85) = a*120- b*85

Idea: find a, b for the last two then modify them to serve for the previous pair.

Last pair = 5,0 GCD=5 obviously5*1 – 0*0 = 5

Add column to left

120 " "

85 1

35 2

15 2

5 3

0 " "

* 120 " "

* 85 1

* 35 2

* 15 2

0 5 3

1 0 " "5*1 – 0*0 = 5 (gcd)

+-

Page 33: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

First: Fill in columns 2 and 3

* 120 " "

* 85 1

* 35 2

* 15 2

0 5 3

1 0 " "

1*5 – 0*0 = 5 ( the gcd)

Now want a and b so that a*15+b*5 = 5

Have which says 15=5*3+0 or

15 – 5*3 = 0

Substituting in the first equation

1*5 – 0*(15 – 5*3) = 51*5 +(0*3)*5 -0*15 = 5(1+0*3)*5 - 0*15 = 5

Page 34: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Then begin filling in column 1

* 120 " "

* 85 1

* 35 2

* 15 2

0 5 3

1 0 " "

(1+0*3)*5 - 0*15 = 5

-+

Page 35: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Note the pattern

* 120 " "

* 85 1

* 35 2

1 15 2

0 5 3

1 0 " "

+

-

-

+

?

* 120 " "

* 85 1

* 35 2

1 15 2

0 5 3

1 0 " "

Pattern

= * +

Page 36: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

"Answers" "Integers" "Divisions"

7 120 "Begin"

5 85 1

2 35 2

1 15 2

0 5 3

1 0 "done"

=

+ *-

= *

+

+

+

-

-

-5*120-7*85 = 5

2*85-5*35 = -5

1*35-2*15 = 5

0*15 -1* 5 = -5

1*5 - 0*0=5

Page 37: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

Same thing works with polynomials

Note we are differing from the book slightly. The book would ask that the gcd be monic. That is it wants the gcd in this problem to be x-2 so it would put a ¼ at the lower left instead of 1.

"Answers" "Polynomials" "Divisions"

1 x 5 x 2 4 x2

x3

"Begin"

1 x2

5 x 6 1 x

0 4 x 8 x

4

3

4

1 0 "done"

( ) 5 x 2 4 x2

x3

1 (1+x) ( ) x2

5 x 6 4 x 8Multiply through by ¼ to write x – 2 as a combination of

5 x 2 4 x2

x3 x

25 x 6and

Page 38: Quiz 2 key. The Euclidean Algorithm (long division)

1*( ) - ( )*( ) = -3 - 3x

"Answers" "Polynomials" "Divisions"

3 x

2

5

2 3 8 x

28 x 3 x

3"Begin"

1 2 x2

2 x 3 x

2

5

2

0 3 3 x2 x

3

1 0 "done"

3 8 x2

8 x 3 x3 3 x

2

5

2 2 x

22 x

Lead coefficient of the gcd is -3.

Monic gcd is (-3 -3x)/(-3) = 1+x. Divide both sides by -3 to get monic gcd as a linear combination.