Prime polynomials in short intervals and in arithmetic progressions
Efrat Bank, Lior Bary-Soroker, Lior Rosenzweig

TL;DR
This paper proves function field analogues of classical prime number conjectures, providing precise estimates for the distribution of prime polynomials in short intervals and arithmetic progressions over finite fields.
Contribution
It establishes new bounds and conditions for the distribution of prime polynomials in short intervals and in arithmetic progressions in the function field setting.
Findings
Prime polynomial counts in short intervals approximate theoretical predictions.
Distribution of prime polynomials in arithmetic progressions matches expected ratios with explicit error bounds.
Results depend on the degree and properties of the polynomials involved.
Abstract
In this paper we establish function field versions of two classical conjectures on prime numbers. The first says that the number of primes in intervals (x,x+x^epsilon] is about x^epsilon/log x and the second says that the number of primes p<x that are congruent to a modulo d, for d^(1+delta)<x, is about pi(x)/phi(d). More precisely, we prove: Let 1\leq m<k be integers, let q be a prime power, and let f be a monic polynomial of degree k with coefficients in the finite field with q elements. Then there is a constant c(k) such that the number N of prime polynomials g=f+h with deg h \leq m satisfies |N-q^(m+1)/k|\leq c(k)q^(m+1/2). Here we assume m\geq 2 if \gcd(q,k(k-1))>1 and m\geq 3 if q is even and deg f' \leq 1. We show that this estimation fails in the neglected cases. Let \pi_q(k) be the number of monic prime polynomials of degree k with coefficients in the finite field with q…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
