Suppose $p$ and $q$ primes and $p$ is odd. Then, are there nice and clever ways to factorize polynomials of the form $$f(x)=1+x+\cdots +x^{p-1}$$ in the ring $\mathbb{F}_q[x]$ ? What about the case when $q=2$ ?
I know that there are factorization algorithms but they are too general. I want to know if there are clever ways to do this for these special type of polynomials. Like for example, in $\mathbb{F}_2$ one might add terms $x^r+x^r$ and rearrange them so that $f(x)$ gets factorized.
In case there are no good methods to factorize, are there nice ways to check whether $f(x)$ is irreducible in $\mathbb{F}_q[x]$ ?
In general, $x^{q^n}-x$ is divisible by exactly the prime polynomials of degree $d|n$.
Therefore, the only prime factors of $1+x+\dots +x^{p-1}$ can be primes of degree $d|p-1$. Not sure where that leads you, however.
– Thomas Andrews Jul 01 '13 at 16:48