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It is my first post here.

I'm studying Group Theory and I found lots of examples of it but for advanced applications.

What I'm trying to find or understand is just the opposit! I want to use Group Theory to solve quadratic polynomials, for example. Can someone please provide some link or example of how to apply Group Theory to solve simple things like to find the roots of a polynomial of degree $n \leq 4$ ? A simple: $x^2+x+c=0$ would be enough to let me start to use it in GAP and Sage Package.

Thank you in advance.

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    Why exactly do you expect group theory to be of help in solving quadratic equations? Now... if someone found how to have it make coffee, *that* would be useful!2012-05-11
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    Please list some of the "advanced applications" you encountered so that we don't bother to suggest them to you. I can't really think of how group theory could be applied to quadratic equations. Galois theory *does* relate solutions of equations to each other using groups, but this would most likely be described as "advanced".2012-05-11
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    Why not to have an example of a quadratic solution using Group Theory _just_ because we ca use _simple algebra_ for that? So, because I can have exactly solutions in Reals or Imaginary I can't use, for example, Newton approximation methods to demonstrate the use of this method? Why not the so **powerful** Group Theory for a simple task?2012-05-11
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    rschwieb: don't put words in my mouth. You do not give an example of Galois showing a step-by-step solution for a simple quadratic equations. If you want some list of 'advanced' usage of Group Theory, type in google: group theory and quantum mechanics or state Y(3,1) and SU(3), gauge and color theory. If you think it is easy to understand, then, you can provide a simple example of Group Theory usage.2012-05-11
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    Here's the thing: polynomials are essentially a "ring concept", you need to add AND multiply. Groups are a "one operation structure" better suited to investigating situations where we have just one operation (like, for example, invertible functions under composition). For an application of groups to "simple things" you might want to look into something like Burnside's Lemma.2012-05-11
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    Got it , David Wheeler.2012-05-11
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    You say "Why not the so powerful Group Theory for a simple task?"... What would you think if someone asked you how to use a bulldozer to sort alphabetically a list of names of people? Bulldozers are pretty powerful tools too!2012-05-11
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    -1: Usually I wouldn't downvote a first-time post, but I was unhappy with the OP's rudeness towards Martin, who bothered to try to help. I have no problem at all with discouraging such people from continuing to use the site.2012-05-12
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    @Mariano Popular expositions frequently mention Galois theory's use of group theory and symmetry for solving polynomial equations, but without giving any details. This naturally raises questions (such as above) as to how those methods work in simple cases. But, of course, such expositions do not motivate questions about group-theoretical coffee-making or sorting bulldozers. Please keep in mind that it might take *great courage* for students to pose their first questions here. Let's strive to handle these questions mathematically, rather than jokingly.2012-05-12
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    Dear Bill, if you read the question of my first comment you will notice that (apart from making a silly joke) I was *asking* the OP where he got the idea. At the time, I did not think it useful, and I do not think it useful now, to speculate on where the confusion arose: I asked in order to, informedly, explain it away.2012-05-12
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    @LuizRobertoMeier I do not understand your negative reaction at all. You wrote "only advanced applications": there were no words put in anyone's mouth. My request to know what you were thinking of was meant in all seriousness, not as sarcasm as you treated it. In the future please assume the good-faith of other posters.2012-05-18
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    @LuizRobertoMeier: Something that may be interesting to you is Lagrange's work on the Theory of Equations, in which he used "symmetries" to obtain a more or less uniform understanding of the solutions of the quadratic, cubic, and quartic. Not Galois Theory exactly, but a precursor to Galois Theory.2013-10-07

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