Key research themes
1. How can geometric and lattice-based models enhance the construction and intuition of finite fields over finite fields?
This research area investigates alternative, more geometric or lattice-theoretic constructions of finite fields over finite fields, aiming to provide intuitive, visual models for field extensions. The goal is to bridge the gap between abstract algebraic definitions and geometric/topological intuition, thereby improving pedagogical approaches and enabling deeper understanding of concepts like Frobenius elements and reciprocity laws at finite field levels.
2. What structural properties and group actions characterize polynomial automorphisms over finite fields, and how do these relate to permutation properties and complexity?
This research theme explores the algebraic and combinatorial structure of polynomial maps and automorphisms over finite fields, their induced permutations on finite vector spaces, and the classification into even and odd permutations. It examines fundamental problems such as the existence of ‘odd’ polynomial automorphisms in certain fields, the tame versus wild classification of automorphisms, and their applications in algebraic geometry and cryptography.
3. How can computational complexity and algebraic factorization challenges for polynomials over finite fields be classified and addressed?
Focuses on the algorithmic and complexity-theoretic challenges involved in factorization and irreducibility testing of polynomials over finite fields or integers, often with additional constraints such as factor evaluation at points or coefficient sums. This area also covers constructive methods for producing irreducible polynomials, factoring in computational algebra, and the hardness of determining factors with prescribed algebraic properties.