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13 March, 18:35

A nonzero polynomial with rational coefficients has all of the numbers [1 sqrt{2},; 2 sqrt{3},; 3 sqrt{4},; dots,; 1000 sqrt{1001}]as roots. What is the smallest possible degree of such a polynomial?

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  1. 13 March, 22:19
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    Its degree can be at least 1970

    Step-by-step explanation:

    for each root of the form √q, where q is not a square, we have a root - √q. Therefore, we need to find, among the numbers below to 1000, how many sqaures there are.

    Since √1000 = 31.6, we have a total of 30 squares:

    2², 3², 4², ..., 30², 31²

    Each square gives one root and the non squares (there are 1000-30 = 970 of them) gives 2 roots (one for them and one for the opposite). Hence the smallest degree a rational polynomial can have is

    970*2 + 30 = 1970
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