If we increase the order of the equation to a third degree polynomial, we get:
The following sixth degree polynomial goes through all the seven points:
So one can see that the analysis of higher degree polynomials to define a permutation is a quite subtle question.
Thus the qubit complexity of path integration is a second degree polynomial in .
The sender determines a degree polynomial, over a finite field, that represents the data points.
We need three values to uniquely fit a second degree polynomial.
Casus irreducibilis can be generalized to higher degree polynomials as follows.
Since both and are third degree polynomials, is at most a third degree polynomial.
Sidi's method allows for interpolation with an arbitrarily high degree polynomial.
The author might then say "higher order element" instead of "higher degree polynomial".