Suppose $k,p\!\in\!\mathbb{N}$ with $p$ prime and $f\!\in\!\mathbb{Z}[x]$ is a univariate polynomial with degree $d$ and all coefficients having absolute value less than $p^k$. We give a Las Vegas randomized algorithm that computes the number of roots of $f$ in $\mathbb{Z}/\!\left(p^k\right)$ within time $d^3(k\log p)^{2+o(1)}$. (We in fact prove a more intricate complexity bound that is slightly better.) The best previous general algorithm had (deterministic) complexity exponential in $k$. We also present some experimental data evincing the potential practicality of our algorithm.
from cs updates on arXiv.org https://ift.tt/2PXetvL
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