1 The Law of Quadratic Reciprocity 135
A second proof of the law of quadratic reciprocity will now be given. Letpbe an
odd prime and, for any integeranot divisible byp, with Legendredefine
(a/p)=1or− 1
according asais a quadratic residue or quadratic nonresidue ofp. It follows from
Euler’s criterion (Proposition II.28) that
(ab/p)=(a/p)(b/p)
for any integersa,bnot divisible byp. Also, by Corollary II.29,
(− 1 /p)=(− 1 )(p−^1 )/^2.
Now letqbe an odd prime distinct frompand letK=Fqbe the finite field con-
tainingqelements. Sincep=q, the polynomialtp−1 has no repeated factors inK
and thus haspdistinct roots in some fieldL⊇K.Ifζis any root other than 1, then
the (cyclotomic) polynomial
f(t)=tp−^1 +tp−^2 +···+ 1
has the rootsζk(k= 1 ,...,p− 1 ).
Consider theGauss sum
τ=
∑p−^1
x= 1
(x/p)ζx.
Instead of summing from 1 top−1, we can just as well sum over any set of represen-
tatives ofF×p:
τ=
∑
x≡0modp
(x/p)ζx.
Sinceqis odd,(x/p)q=(x/p)and hence, sinceLhas characteristicq,
τq=
∑
x≡0modp
(x/p)ζxq.
If we puty=xqthen, since
(x/p)=(q^2 x/p)=(qy/p)=(q/p)(y/p),
we obtain
τq=
∑
y≡0modp
(q/p)(y/p)ζy=(q/p)τ.
Furthermore,
τ^2 =
∑
u,v≡0modp
(u/p)(v/p)ζuζv=
∑
u,v≡0modp
(uv/p)ζu+v