Let be a finite field and be a set of polynomials such that the number of variables satisfies where is the total degree of. The theorems are statements about the solutions of the following system of polynomial equations
Chevalley–Warning theorem states that the number of common solutions is divisible by the characteristic of. Or in other words, the cardinality of the vanishing set of is modulo.
Chevalley's theorem states that if the system has the trivial solution, i.e. if the polynomials have no constant terms, then the system also has a non-trivial solution.
Chevalley's theorem is an immediate consequence of the Chevalley–Warning theorem since is at least 2. Both theorems are best possible in the sense that, given any, the list has total degree and only the trivial solution. Alternatively, using just one polynomial, we can take f1 to be the degree n polynomial given by the norm of x1a1 +... + xnan where the elementsa form a basis of the finite field of order pn. Warning proved another theorem, known as Warning's second theorem, which states that if the system of polynomial equations has the trivial solution, then it has at least solutions where is the size of the finite field and. Chevalley's theorem also follows directly from this.
Remark: If then so the sum over of any polynomial in of degree less than also vanishes. The total number of common solutions modulo of is equal to because each term is 1 for a solution and 0 otherwise. If the sum of the degrees of the polynomials is less than n then this vanishes by the remark above.
It is a consequence of Chevalley's theorem that finite fields are quasi-algebraically closed. This had been conjectured by Emil Artin in 1935. The motivation behind Artin's conjecture was his observation that quasi-algebraically closed fields have trivial Brauer group, together with the fact that finite fields have trivial Brauer group by Wedderburn's theorem.
The Ax–Katz theorem
The Ax–Katz theorem, named after James Ax and Nicholas Katz, determines more accurately a power of the cardinality of dividing the number of solutions; here, if is the largest of the, then the exponent can be taken as the ceiling function of The Ax–Katz result has an interpretation in étale cohomology as a divisibility result for the the zeroes and poles of the local zeta-function. Namely, the same power of divides each of these algebraic integers.