The set of power sum symmetric polynomials of degrees 1, 2, ...,
n in
n variables
generates the
ring of
symmetric polynomials in
n variables. More specifically: :
Theorem. The ring of symmetric polynomials with rational coefficients equals the rational polynomial ring \mathbb Q[p_1,\ldots,p_n]. The same is true if the coefficients are taken in any
field of
characteristic 0. However, this is not true if the coefficients must be integers. For example, for
n = 2, the symmetric polynomial :P(x_1,x_2) = x_1^2 x_2 + x_1 x_2^2 + x_1x_2 has the expression :P(x_1,x_2) = \frac{p_1^3-p_1p_2}{2} + \frac{p_1^2-p_2}{2} \,, which involves fractions. According to the theorem this is the only way to represent P(x_1,x_2) in terms of
p1 and
p2. Therefore,
P does not belong to the integral polynomial ring \mathbb Z[p_1,\ldots,p_n]. For another example, the
elementary symmetric polynomials
ek, expressed as polynomials in the power sum polynomials, do not all have integral coefficients. For instance, :e_2 := \sum_{1 \leq i The theorem is also untrue if the field has characteristic different from 0. For example, if the field
F has characteristic 2, then p_2 = p_1^2, so
p1 and
p2 cannot generate
e2 =
x1
x2.
Sketch of a partial proof of the theorem: By
Newton's identities the power sums are functions of the elementary symmetric polynomials; this is implied by the following
recurrence relation, though the explicit function that gives the power sums in terms of the
ej is complicated: :p_n = (-1)^{n-1}ne_n + \sum_{j=1}^{n-1} (-1)^{j-1} e_j p_{n-j} \,. Rewriting the same recurrence, one has the elementary symmetric polynomials in terms of the power sums (also implicitly, the explicit formula being complicated): : e_n = \frac{1}{n} \sum_{j=1}^n (-1)^{j-1} e_{n-j} p_j \,. This implies that the elementary polynomials are rational, though not integral, linear combinations of the power sum polynomials of degrees 1, ...,
n. Since the elementary symmetric polynomials are an algebraic basis for all symmetric polynomials with coefficients in a field, it follows that every symmetric polynomial in
n variables is a polynomial function f(p_1,\ldots,p_n) of the power sum symmetric polynomials
p1, ...,
pn. That is, the ring of symmetric polynomials is contained in the ring generated by the power sums, \mathbb Q[p_1,\ldots,p_n]. Because every power sum polynomial is symmetric, the two rings are equal. (This does not show how to prove the polynomial
f is unique.) For another system of symmetric polynomials with similar properties see
complete homogeneous symmetric polynomials. ==See also==