Threshold cryptosystem

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In mathematics, the method of equating the coefficients is a way of solving a functional equation of two polynomials for a number of unknown parameters. It relies on the fact that two polynomials are identical precisely when all corresponding coefficients are equal. The method is used to bring formulas into a desired form.

Example

Suppose we want to apply partial fraction decomposition to the expression:

1x(x1)(x2),

that is, we want to bring it into the form:

Ax+Bx1+Cx2,

in which the unknown parameters are A, B and C. Multiplying these formulas by x(x − 1)(x − 2) turns both into polynomials, which we equate:

A(x1)(x2)+Bx(x2)+Cx(x1)=1,

or, after expansion and collecting terms with equal powers of x:

(A+B+C)x2(3A+2B+C)x+2A=1.

At this point it is essential to realize that the polynomial 1 is in fact equal to the polynomial 0x2 + 0x + 1, having zero coefficients for the positive powers of x. Equating the corresponding coefficients now results in this system of linear equations:

A+B+C=0,
3A+2B+C=0,
2A=1.

Solving it results in:

A=12,B=1,C=12.

References

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