Investigating the exceptionality of scattered polynomials
Daniele Bartoli, Giovanni Zini, Ferdinando Zullo

TL;DR
This paper studies the classification of scattered polynomials over finite fields, focusing on the properties of being L-$q^t$-partially and R-$q^t$-partially scattered, and extends known results using algebraic geometry techniques.
Contribution
It extends the classification of exceptional scattered polynomials to L-$q^t$-partially scattered cases and introduces new families of R-$q^t$-partially scattered polynomials with geometric insights.
Findings
Extended classification results for L-$q^t$-partially scattered polynomials.
Constructed large families of R-$q^t$-partially scattered polynomials.
Identified inequivalent polynomials and their geometric equivalence classes.
Abstract
Scattered polynomials over a finite field have been introduced by Sheekey in 2016, and a central open problem regards the classification of those that are exceptional. So far, only two families of exceptional scattered polynomials are known. Very recently, Longobardi and Zanella weakened the property of being scattered by introducing the notion of L--partially scattered and R--partially scattered polynomials, for a divisor of . Indeed, a polynomial is scattered if and only if it is both L--partially scattered and R--partially scattered. In this paper, by using techniques from algebraic geometry over finite fields and function fields theory, we show that the property which is is the hardest to be preserved is the L--partially scattered one. On the one hand, we are able to extend the classification results of exceptional scattered…
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